Abstract

The injection of chicken and sheep red blood cells (CRBC and SRBC) into rat popliteal lymph nodes either together or sequentially 2, 4, 6, or 8 days apart resulted in an enhanced immune response when the second antigen was injected 2 or 4 days after the injection of the first antigen (antigenic promotion) or a suppressed immune response when the second antigen was injected 6 days after the injection of the first antigen (antigenic competition). The immune response to either antigen was dependent upon the time of administration of the second antigen with respect to the first antigen. Lymphocyte migration into antigenically stimulated lymph nodes was greater when the two antigens were injected sequentially rather than together. Further, the migration of lymphocytes into the lymph node was enhanced when the second antigen was injected during the inductive or suppressive phase of the immune response to the first antigen (CRBC) regardless of whether the same (CRBC) or an antigenically unrelated antigen (SRBC) was used as the second antigen. While antigenic promotion may in part be explained by the increased rate at which lymphocytes migrate into lymph nodes, lymphocyte migration is also enhanced during antigenic competition. This suggests that while suppressor cells/factors may regulate the effector phase of an immune response they do not directly modulate the migration of blood-borne lymphocytes into the lymph node.

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