Functional activation of immune lymphocytes by antigenic stimulation in cell-mediated immunity. III. A soluble factor released from LPS-stimulated peritoneal adherent cells effective in antigenic activation of sensitized lymphocytes. |
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Authors: | Y Yamamoto K Onoue M Ohishi |
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Affiliation: | Department of Biochemistry, Kyushu University School of Dentistry, Fukuoka, Japan |
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Abstract: | Antigen-induced production of migration inhibitory factor (MIF) by sensitized lymphocytes requires macrophages to effectively stimulate lymphocytes with soluble antigen in vitro. The present study showed that macrophage-depleted lymphocytes of sensitized guinea pigs could be activated with antigens when the culture supernatant of peritoneal adherent cells pulse-stimulated with a macromolecular fraction of bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) was added to the lymphocyte culture. The apparent macrophage-replacing activity was found in the fraction which emerged slightly ahead of serum albumin upon gel filtration of the culture supernatant, and the activity was shown to be destroyed by heating at 65 °C for 30 min or by trypsin digestion. These results appeared to show that the activity was due to a protein component, most probably released from macrophages. Two-step culture experiments revealed that the soluble factor should be present in the early stage of the culture to activate the macrophage-depleted immune lymphocytes with antigen, as well as in the later stage when the presence of antigen in the medium is no longer required. Furthermore, the factor was shown to act in the activation of a T-cell-enriched fraction of immune lymphocytes. The factor appeared to be playing some essential role in making an antigenic stimulus effective for the activation of immune lymphocytes. |
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