Abstract

Thoracic duct lymph from inbred, hooded rats was collected 3–5 days after antigenic stimulation of the caudal lymph nodes. During this period the lymph contained 10–15% of large, basophilic lymphoid blast cells (immunoblasts). By incubating the lymph cells at 38.C with radioactive DNA precursors, either 3H‐thymidine or 125I‐deoxyuridine, the immunoblasts became labelled but the small lymphocytes did not. The lymph cells were then washed and injected intravenously into syngeneic recipients which were killed after various intervals up to 24 hr so that the radioactivity of their organs could be assayed by scintillation counting and autoradiography.The main finding was that in animals killed after 4 or more hours the small gut always contained most of the recoverable activity and autoradiographs showed that this was because the injected cells had infiltrated the lamina propria in large numbers. Earlier, many of the injected cells were retained temporarily in the lungs, liver and spleen but many of them soon left those organs and entered the lamina propria of the small gut.An electron microscope study of autoradiographs showed that 24 hr after injection the cells which entered the lamina propria of the gut had differentiated into plasma cells so that they displayed abundant, lamellar endoplasmic reticulum.

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