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Response of human fetal lymphocytes in xenogeneic mixed leukocyte culture: Phylogenetic and ontogenetic aspects
Authors:Tuula Asantila  Jaakko Vahala  Paavo Toivanen
Institution:(1) Department of Medical Microbiology, Turku University, SF-20520 Turku;(2) Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Satakunta Central Hospital, SF-28500 Pori, Finland
Abstract:Cells from liver, thymus, and spleen of human fetuses at different stages of development were capable of a proliferation response against xenogeneic and allogeneic lymphocytes. The kinetics of fetal responses against rat lymphocytes were identical to those of fetal and adult responses against allogeneic cells. With all of the cell types studied, including adult lymphocytes, allogeneic responses were stronger than xenogeneic. Xenogeneic responses against lymphocytes from rat, mouse, or sheep were stronger than those against lymphocytes from rabbit, chicken, snake, or frog. These results are interpreted to indicate that recognition of foreign lymphocytes by human lymphocytes depends on the phylogenetic position of the species used as a source of stimulating cells. The degree of recognition decreases as the phylogenetic distance increases. Specific elimination of responding cells and restimulation with another cell population was used to study the specificity of proliferation responses against mouse and rat lymphocytes. Responses by prethymic liver cells from human fetuses were not due to the existence of specifically recognizing subpopulations. Thymus and spleen at 16 weeks' gestation contained specific subpopulations capable of differentiating between xenogeneic and allogeneic cells, as well as between xenogeneic cells with different intraspecies histocompatibility patterns. Generation of receptor diversity on T lymphocytes is discussed briefly in the light of these findings.
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