Abstract

137Cs-irradiated mouse spleen cells, in contrast to mitomycin-blocked cells, do not stimulate a mixed lymphocyte reaction (MLR) when cocultured with normal allogeneic lymphocytes. Attempts to find an irradiation dose which blocks the DNA-synthetic capability of alloantigenic cells, but which does not also render them unstimulatory in mixed cultures, have not been successful. Low-level irradiation (100–500 rad) does not completely block mitogen (PHA) reactivity, hence the target cells may be capable of participating in a two-way MLR. High-level irradiation (> 1000 rad), however, thoroughly blocks PHA-stimulated DNA synthesis and eliminates the capacity of these cells to stimulate an MLR. Potentiation of MLR by irradiated cells syngeneic with the reacting cell population was not possible in these experiments. Cell death and lysis in irradiated suspensions occurred during the 72-hr culture period. It is believed that a combination of cell lysis and irradiation-blocked metabolic events normally necessary for the MLR sufficies to explain the poor or nonexistent MLR's obtained in these experiments.

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