PMID: 6169780Oct 1, 1981Paper

Cellular interactions in immune regulation. Hapten-specific suppression by non-T cells and T cell mediated reversal of suppression

The Journal of Experimental Medicine
R DeKruyffG W Siskind

Abstract

The ability of lymphoid cells from immunized animals to regulate the response of naive B ceils to the immunizing hapten was studied. Mice were immunized with trinitrophenylated (TNP) bovine gamma globulin (BGG) in complete Freund's adjuvant, and their spleen cells were examined in vivo and in vitro for the presence of specific inhibitory activity. This activity was found to peak 1 wk after immunization, was active against TNP on both T-dependent (BGG) and T-independent (Ficoll and polyacrylamide beads) carriers, and was demonstrable both by mixed cell transfers and mixed cell culture experiments. In in vitro studies, it was shown that the inhibition of the response to TNP- polyacrylamide beads by immune spleen cells was mediated by a non-T cell, possibly a B cell, because the suppressor activity was enriched in a purified B cell preparation. A role for macrophages was not formally ruled out. A specific suppressor factor was produced in vitro by immune spleen cells cultured in the absence of antigen. The suppressor activity was modulated by T .cells because elimination of T cells from the normal spleen cell population decreased suppression; elimination of T cells from the immune spleen cell population did not effect suppression,...Continue Reading

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