Abstract: | In our previous paper, we reported that various types of carrageenan, dextran sulfate and fucoidan, which are sulfated homopolysaccharides with high molecular weights, were human T cell mitogens and murine polyclonal B cell activators (PBAs) and that heparin, a sulfated heteropolysaccharide, was a very weak human mitogen and mouse PBA. Here we used cellulose sulfate (Mr 7-9 X 10(3], dextran sulfate with two different low molecular weights (Mr 5 X 10(3) and 8 X 10(3], two different condroitin sulfates (Mr 3.5 X 10(4], polyvinyl sulfate and polygalacturonic acid to investigate mitogenic activities of polysaccharides in detail. The following results were obtained. Low-molecular-weight sulfated homopolysaccharides, dextran sulfate and cellulose sulfate, were very weak or not human T cell mitogens. However, they were better murine PBAs. Sulfated heteropolysaccharides, chondroitin 4-sulfate and chondroitin 6-sulfate, hardly induced mitogenic changes in human T cells and mouse B cells, even though the molecular weight of these substances was more than 1 X 10(4). There were no other polymers examined so far which activated both human T cells and murine B cells. The relationship among molecular size, sulfate groups and lymphocyte activation is discussed in detail. |