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MECHANISM OF ACTIVATION OF THE BONE MARROW-DERIVED LYMPHOCYTE : III. A DISTINCTION BETWEEN A MACROPHAGE-PRODUCED TRIGGERING SIGNAL AND THE AMPLIFYING EFFECT ON TRIGGERED B LYMPHOCYTES OF ALLOGENEIC INTERACTIONS

Peritoneal exudate cells from nu/nu mice stimulated with proteose peptone broth, but in general not from unstimulated mice, permitted cultures of spleen cells from congenitally athymic (nu/nu) mice to respond to the thymus-dependent antigen fowl gamma globulin (FγG). Supernatants of cultures of peri...

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Autor principal: Schrader, John W.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1973
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2139452/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/4128440
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author Schrader, John W.
author_facet Schrader, John W.
author_sort Schrader, John W.
collection PubMed
description Peritoneal exudate cells from nu/nu mice stimulated with proteose peptone broth, but in general not from unstimulated mice, permitted cultures of spleen cells from congenitally athymic (nu/nu) mice to respond to the thymus-dependent antigen fowl gamma globulin (FγG). Supernatants of cultures of peritoneal cells were also effective, the activity being sensitive to trypsin. Since nu/nu mice were effective sources of the peritoneal cells it would not seem obligatory for the thymus-derived (T) cell to be involved in the triggering of the bone marrow-derived (B) cell by a thymus-dependent antigen FγG. It is proposed that the B cell is triggered at the macrophage surface where it encounters two signals (a) the antigen and (b) a protein secreted by the activated macrophage. In vivo the T cell may have a role in B-cell triggering, either in activating the macrophage or in aiding in presentation of antigen on the macrophage surface. Thymus-independent antigens are proposed to induce an IgM response because they are able to provide "signal two" either by direct interaction with the B cell or via irritation or activation of the macrophage. The stimulatory effect of T cells activated by an allogeneic interaction was used as a model of one influence of the T cell on the development of an antibody response. The presence in cultures of nu/nu spleen of an allogeneic interaction had no effect on the inability of these cells to respond to FγG. However when a source of the postulated second signal such as the supernatant of a macrophage culture was present, an allogeneic interaction had a powerful amplifying effect on the anti-FγG response. In contrast the response of nu/nu spleen cultures to heterologous erythrocytes was greatly enhanced by the presence of an allogeneic interaction. It is suggested that since there was a definite basal response to the heterologous erythrocytes added alone, the enhancement represented not an activation of more B cells but rather an amplification of this basal response. Thus the anti-FγG response in cultures of nu/nu spleen differentiates between factors such as those released by activated macrophages that are involved in B-cell triggering and factors released by activated T cells that amplify the numbers of antibody-forming cells resulting from a B cell already triggered.
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spelling pubmed-21394522008-04-17 MECHANISM OF ACTIVATION OF THE BONE MARROW-DERIVED LYMPHOCYTE : III. A DISTINCTION BETWEEN A MACROPHAGE-PRODUCED TRIGGERING SIGNAL AND THE AMPLIFYING EFFECT ON TRIGGERED B LYMPHOCYTES OF ALLOGENEIC INTERACTIONS Schrader, John W. J Exp Med Article Peritoneal exudate cells from nu/nu mice stimulated with proteose peptone broth, but in general not from unstimulated mice, permitted cultures of spleen cells from congenitally athymic (nu/nu) mice to respond to the thymus-dependent antigen fowl gamma globulin (FγG). Supernatants of cultures of peritoneal cells were also effective, the activity being sensitive to trypsin. Since nu/nu mice were effective sources of the peritoneal cells it would not seem obligatory for the thymus-derived (T) cell to be involved in the triggering of the bone marrow-derived (B) cell by a thymus-dependent antigen FγG. It is proposed that the B cell is triggered at the macrophage surface where it encounters two signals (a) the antigen and (b) a protein secreted by the activated macrophage. In vivo the T cell may have a role in B-cell triggering, either in activating the macrophage or in aiding in presentation of antigen on the macrophage surface. Thymus-independent antigens are proposed to induce an IgM response because they are able to provide "signal two" either by direct interaction with the B cell or via irritation or activation of the macrophage. The stimulatory effect of T cells activated by an allogeneic interaction was used as a model of one influence of the T cell on the development of an antibody response. The presence in cultures of nu/nu spleen of an allogeneic interaction had no effect on the inability of these cells to respond to FγG. However when a source of the postulated second signal such as the supernatant of a macrophage culture was present, an allogeneic interaction had a powerful amplifying effect on the anti-FγG response. In contrast the response of nu/nu spleen cultures to heterologous erythrocytes was greatly enhanced by the presence of an allogeneic interaction. It is suggested that since there was a definite basal response to the heterologous erythrocytes added alone, the enhancement represented not an activation of more B cells but rather an amplification of this basal response. Thus the anti-FγG response in cultures of nu/nu spleen differentiates between factors such as those released by activated macrophages that are involved in B-cell triggering and factors released by activated T cells that amplify the numbers of antibody-forming cells resulting from a B cell already triggered. The Rockefeller University Press 1973-11-30 /pmc/articles/PMC2139452/ /pubmed/4128440 Text en Copyright © 1973 by The Rockefeller University Press This article is distributed under the terms of an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike–No Mirror Sites license for the first six months after the publication date (see http://www.rupress.org/terms). After six months it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 4.0 Unported license, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Schrader, John W.
MECHANISM OF ACTIVATION OF THE BONE MARROW-DERIVED LYMPHOCYTE : III. A DISTINCTION BETWEEN A MACROPHAGE-PRODUCED TRIGGERING SIGNAL AND THE AMPLIFYING EFFECT ON TRIGGERED B LYMPHOCYTES OF ALLOGENEIC INTERACTIONS
title MECHANISM OF ACTIVATION OF THE BONE MARROW-DERIVED LYMPHOCYTE : III. A DISTINCTION BETWEEN A MACROPHAGE-PRODUCED TRIGGERING SIGNAL AND THE AMPLIFYING EFFECT ON TRIGGERED B LYMPHOCYTES OF ALLOGENEIC INTERACTIONS
title_full MECHANISM OF ACTIVATION OF THE BONE MARROW-DERIVED LYMPHOCYTE : III. A DISTINCTION BETWEEN A MACROPHAGE-PRODUCED TRIGGERING SIGNAL AND THE AMPLIFYING EFFECT ON TRIGGERED B LYMPHOCYTES OF ALLOGENEIC INTERACTIONS
title_fullStr MECHANISM OF ACTIVATION OF THE BONE MARROW-DERIVED LYMPHOCYTE : III. A DISTINCTION BETWEEN A MACROPHAGE-PRODUCED TRIGGERING SIGNAL AND THE AMPLIFYING EFFECT ON TRIGGERED B LYMPHOCYTES OF ALLOGENEIC INTERACTIONS
title_full_unstemmed MECHANISM OF ACTIVATION OF THE BONE MARROW-DERIVED LYMPHOCYTE : III. A DISTINCTION BETWEEN A MACROPHAGE-PRODUCED TRIGGERING SIGNAL AND THE AMPLIFYING EFFECT ON TRIGGERED B LYMPHOCYTES OF ALLOGENEIC INTERACTIONS
title_short MECHANISM OF ACTIVATION OF THE BONE MARROW-DERIVED LYMPHOCYTE : III. A DISTINCTION BETWEEN A MACROPHAGE-PRODUCED TRIGGERING SIGNAL AND THE AMPLIFYING EFFECT ON TRIGGERED B LYMPHOCYTES OF ALLOGENEIC INTERACTIONS
title_sort mechanism of activation of the bone marrow-derived lymphocyte : iii. a distinction between a macrophage-produced triggering signal and the amplifying effect on triggered b lymphocytes of allogeneic interactions
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2139452/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/4128440
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