Abstract

The Fc fragment-mediated polyclonal antibody response was utilized to assess B-cell, T-cell, and macrophage reactivity in aged C57BL/6 mice. Spleen cells from aged (28–30 months) mice were found to be deficient in their capacity to proliferate and produce polyclonal antibody in response to Fc fragments when compared to adult (2–3 months) controls. Since T cells are required for the Fc-induced polyclonal antibody response, T cells from aged mice were assessed for their ability to restore the polyclonal antibody response in T-cell-depleted adult spleen cell populations. Aged T cells were not as effective as adult T cells in restoring the antibody response. The T-cell requirement in the Fc-induced polyclonal response has been shown to be replaceable by the Fc-stimulated T-cell replacing factor (Fc)TRF. T cells derived from aged mice were unable to produce (Fc)TRF to the level of adult cells. In addition to a defect in the T-cell compartment a lesion exists in the B-cell compartment of aged mice as well. Adult T cells were not capable of restoring the polyclonal antibody response of aged B cells any higher than aged T cells indicating a B-cell defect. Moreover, when a direct B-cell activator, Fc subfragment, was employed, the aged B cells were not stimulated to the level of adult controls. To test the ability of aged macrophages to function as accessory cells in the polyclonal response, macrophage-depleted adult spleen cells were mixed with aged or adult macrophages and the response measured. The results indicate that aged macrophages restore the polyclonal antibody response as efficiently as their adult counterpart.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call