Abstract

An immune ribonucleic acid (RNA) preparation was extracted with phenol from the spleens of guinea pigs immunized with diphtheria toxoid. Antibody-carrying cells were detected by immunocyte adhesion as rosette-forming cells. When germ-free rats, conventional guinea pigs or mice were injected intraperitoneally with this preparation, the rosette-formers were detected in either peritoneal exudate cells or spleen cells, whereas serum antibodies were unable to be detected thus far in such animals. Two injections with this preparation did not cause any remarkable increase in the number of rosette-formers, and serum antibody was also not detectable. By contrast, a high titer of serum antibody was demonstrated and the number of rosette-formers increased shortly after an injection of a small amount of diphtheria toxoid into guinea pigs which had previously received an injection with immune RNA. This reaction indicates a secondary response of antibody formation. However, secondary responses were not induced by injections of immune RNA preparations in guinea pigs primed with either diphtheria toxoid or immune RNA preparation. These facts suggest that immune RNA preparations did not contain antigens or fragments thereof and the immune response induced by RNA preparation is not the same as that induced by stimulation by the antigen itself. These results moreover can be accounted for by the notion that the immune RNA preparation is able to induce “memory” cells capable of responding to a secondary stimulus with an antigen and producing a high titer of serum antibody.

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