Abstract

Radioactively labelled thoracic duct lymphocytes from syngeneic rat donors were injected iv into recipients which had been given a continuous iv infusion of prednisolone at 1 mg/hr for 15–18 hr previously. The tissue distribution and recirculation into lymph of the labelled lymphocytes were compared quantitatively in the prednisolone-treated and control recipients by scintillation counting and autoradiography. The most prominent effect of prednisolone was to retard recirculating lymphocytes within the tissues to which they are normally distributed by the blood, namely the bone marrow, the spleen, and the lymph nodes. Although lymphocyte traffic was almost completely frozen by prednisolone, recirculating lymphocytes were not killed. A second effect of prednisolone was to impair the influx of lymphocytes from the blood into lymph nodes. Different groups of lymph nodes varied in the extent to which prednisolone inhibited the entry of lymphocytes, and previous antigenic stimulation completely exempted lymph nodes from this inhibition. Lymphocytes took a longer time to cross the walls of high endothelial venules in the lymph nodes of prednisolone-treated rats. A third effect of prednisolone was to increase the rate at which lymphocytes entered the bone marrow from the blood by crossing sinusoidal endothelium.

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