Abstract

A sensitive culture system for measuring lymphocyte transformation under physiological conditions by thymidine incorporation into DNA has been developed to study mouse and chick cell responses to mitogens. Both phytohemagglutinin (PHA) and pokeweed mitogen (PWM) stimulated thymus and spleen lymphocytes. Reduced but definite responses were obtained with lymph nodes, but negligible response with bone marrow cells. Thymocytes of newborn mice did not respond to PHA, but responded well to PWM. PHA responsiveness of thymocytes increased with aging until 12 weeks of postnatal life and then decreased in older animals. The level of background thymidine incorporation increased with advancing age. Spleen cells of 2-week-old mice were transformed by PHA and PWM, but in contrast to mouse thymus there was no decrease in older animals. Neonatal thymectomy of mice reduced the response of spleen cells to both PHA and PWM, especially in younger animals. The reduction was almost complete in the case of the PHA response, but only partial with the PWM response. Spleen cells from bursectomised chickens, checked for absence of B cell function, still responded well to both PWM and PHA. The results suggest PHA is a marker for T-lymphocytes in a certain “mature” stage of differentiation. PWM appears to stimulate a wider spectrum of cells.

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