Abstract

Macrophages exert a major effect in the stimulation of lymphocytes and the modulation of immunological responses. To determine the presence and phenotypic distribution of the resident cells of the mononuclear phagocyte system in submandibular glands, frozen sections were prepared from five normal rats, and from six rats treated with 20 mg/kg isoproterenol/day for 10 days. A panel of six monoclonal antibodies was used to identify membrane markers associated primarily with circulatory monocytes (ED1), mature tissue macrophages (ED2), lymphoid macrophages (ED3), Ia antigen (OX6), CD5-positive T lymphocytes (OX19) and rat B lymphocytes (OX33). Cells identified by each monoclonal antibody were quantified by averaging the number of positive cells in 10 consecutive random high-power fields. ED2 cells (165 cells/field) were predominant in normal rat submandibular gland, followed by lower numbers of OX6-positive cells (18 cells/field). Cells positive for the remaining markers were also present in smaller amounts. In submandibular glands, treatment of rats with isoproterenol resulted in an increase in ED1-positive cells (from 2 to 39 cells/field), but also in substantial decreases in the number of cells positive for the remaining cell markers.-B cells were not detected in any of the submandibular glands examined. These data suggest that isoproterenol induces a mild inflammatory response within rat submandibular glands that is not observed in normal glands. This results in an increase in the relative number of infiltrating monocytes compared to the number of more mature tissue macrophages.

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