Abstract

The capacity of the C8-substituted guanine ribonucleosides to provide T cell-like signals to cultures of splenic B cells was evaluated. We showed previously that these low m.w. nucleoside derivatives traverse the cell membrane and induce their effects from an intracellular location. The current studies clearly demonstrate that 8 mercaptoguanosine (8MGuo), when added to cultures of B cells and macrophages in the presence of antigen, is capable of supplying a "second signal" for B cells, enabling them to generate high numbers of specific plaque-forming cells against the immunizing antigen. This effect is duplicated in cultures of spleen cells from congenitally athymic mice. Inhibition of interleukin 2 (IL 2) generation by cyclosporin A, such that the antibody response of normal spleen cells is entirely abrogated, has minimal effects on the T cell-replacing activity of 8MGuo. Additivity studies with MLC supernatants as well as kinetic analyses with IL 2-associated lymphokines substantiate that these factors act by a mechanism distinct from that of 8MGuo and 8BrGuo. These observations establish these nucleoside activators as exciting new probes for T helper cell activity and an effective non-T cell source of T cell-like signals.

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