Cellular aspects of tolerance. II. Unresponsiveness of B cells |
| |
Authors: | A M Kaplan B Cinader |
| |
Affiliation: | Institute of Immunology, Departments of Medical Biophysics, Medical Cell Biology and Clinical Biochemistry, Medical Sciences Building, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5S 1A8 |
| |
Abstract: | The responsiveness of bone marrow cells from tolerant donors was examined by reconstitution of lethally irradiated tolerogen-free recipients. In these animals, stem cells from tolerant donors gave rise to immunologically competent antigen sensitive B cells. The antibody produced by these cells could be detected by a sensitive plaque assay in liquid and by antigen elimination. The antibody was not demonstrable by an assay which only detected plaque forming antibody which was highly avid or was formed in large quantity per cell. In lethally irradiated animals, partially purified B cells from a tolerant animal could not cooperate with T cells from normal donors to reconstitute immunological responsiveness to immunogenic doses of the tolerance inducing antigen. We concluded that antigen sensitive B cells in the bone marrow become unresponsive following administration of tolerogenic forms of antigen. Responsiveness of the reconstituted recipient animals was due to the differentiation of donor stem cells and subsequent antibody production by their descendants. Earlier contradictory findings could be unified in terms of these observations and conclusions. |
| |
Keywords: | |
本文献已被 ScienceDirect 等数据库收录! |
|