Abstract

Cord factor--a mixture of 6,6'-diesters of alpha, alpha-D-trehalose with natural mycolic acids--which is purified from mycobacteria and other microorganisms, is known to have adjuvant activity as well as to enhance nonspecific resistance to infections and tumor development. In this work, trehalose 6,6'-dimycolate (TDM) was found to induce proliferative responses in rat thymus and lymph node cells. With the thymus cells, TDM responses were greater after removal of the adherent cell subpopulation. Consistent with this observation was the finding that addition of phagocytic cells purified from peritoneal or lymph node cell suspensions to nonadherent thymocytes abrogated the response of thymocytes to TDM. With the lymph node cells, the presence or removal of adherent cells had no major consequence on the TDM-induced proliferative response, since similar increases in deoxyribonucleic acid synthesis were observed with unfractionated and nonadherent cells. The difference between the sensitivities of thymus cells and lymph node cells to regulation by adherent cells indicated the existence of more than one type of TDM responder cell in rats. TDM also displayed marked stimulatory activity on thymus and lymph node cells from germ-free rats, ruling out the possibility that TDM might have triggered a specific, secondary, in vitro immune response. Expansion of a selected cell population(s) triggered by TDM may be involved in the manifestation of adjuvant activity and possibly other immunological properties of cord factor.

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