Abstract

Using a cell transfer system it was shown that lymphoid cells of B.C-9 mice mature to be able to generate a primary response of high magnitude and high affinity to dinitrophenylated γ-globulin at about 4 weeks of age. Irradiated mice reconstituted with lymphoid cells from B.C-9 or C57BL/6 donors younger than 4 weeks of age fail to produce high-affinity plaque-forming cells and their serum antibody responses were of low magnitude. Nevertheless such recipients give adult-like, high-affinity, high-magnitude secondary responses when assayed at both the plaque-forming cell and serum antibody levels. The antibody produced by the reconstituted mice, in both the primary and secondary responses, was shown to be of donor cell origin in transfers between allotype congenic pairs. Thus, naive, immature lymphoid cells, although not capable of giving rise to high-affinity antibody-secreting cells in a primary response, are capable of giving rise to high-affinity memory B cells which in turn can give an adult-like, high-affinity secondary response following boosting.

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