Abstract

The capacity of the alveolar macrophage to act as an accessory cell in PHA-induced lymphocyte proliferation was investigated and compared with that of the peritoneal and peritoneal exudate macrophages in guinea pigs. When lymph node cells were co-cultured with autologous lung cells recovered by airway lavage, the proliferative response to PHA was greatly enhanced over that of lymph node cells alone. In the presence of peritoneal cells or peritoneal exudate (glycogen-induced) cells, the PHA response was intermediate between that of lymph node cells alone and lymph node cells cultured with lung cells. Experiments using purified macrophages (≥98%) as accessory cells demonstrated that the difference observed between lung and peritoneal accessory cells was due to differences in macrophage function. Furthermore, when lymph node cells were cultured in the upper chamber of a double-chambered Marbrook apparatus, PHA-induced proliferation was enhanced only when lung and not peritoneal macrophages were present in the lower chamber. Additional experiments showed that this difference (1) was not an artifact of the thymidine incorporation assay to measure proliferation; (2) was not affected by changing the macrophage-lymphocyte ratio; and (3) was not simply a trephocytic or growth promoting effect of macrophages which could be replaced by 2-mercaptoethanol. These findings show that macrophages from different sources differ in their abilities to act as accessory cells in PHA-induced lymphocyte proliferation. Alveolar macrophages appear to have an enhanced capacity compared to unstimulated and stimulated peritoneal macrophages in this function. At least part of this difference may be due to a difference in the elaboration of soluble factor (s) by macrophages.

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