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Transfer of agammaglobulinemia in the chicken. I. Generation of suppressor activity by injection of bursa cells
Authors:M D Grebenau  S P Lerman  D S Chi  G J Thorbecke
Institution:Department of Pathology, New York University School of Medicine, 550 First Avenue, New York, New York 10016 USA
Abstract:Spleen cells from adult agammaglobulinemic (bursectomized) chickens taken 1 to 3 weeks after an injection of histocompatible bursa cells can inhibit the adoptive antibody response to B. abortus of normal spleen or bursa cells in irradiated recipients. Spleen cells from Aγ chickens not injected with bursa cells generally do not. Moreover, bursectomized chickens which have been reconstituted with spleen cells within the first week after hatching do not respond with suppressor cell formation upon bursa cell injection. This apparent “autoimmunization” with bursa cells induces suppressor T cells which are only minimally sensitive to treatment with mitomycin C or to 5000 R γ irradiation. The suppressor activity is neither induced nor potentiated by concanavalin A in vivo. It is much stronger in spleen than in thymus cells and appears to be macrophage independent and to require intact cells. The cell component which stimulates the suppressor activity is more pronounced on bursa than on spleen cells, and is at most present to a very limited extent on bone marrow, thymus, or peritoneal exudate cells. It is better represented in comparable cell numbers of Day 17 than of Day 14 embryonic bursa. The inducing cell component is present in the membrane fraction of disrupted bursa cells. Immunization with bursa cells from B locus histoincompatible chickens leads to suppressor activity against histocompatible bursa cells. Although the removal of Ig-bearing cells from bursa greatly diminishes its immunizing capacity, injection of serum IgM and IgG does not induce suppressor cells. It is suggested that tolerance to a B-cell antigen is lacking in adult Aγ chickens, resulting in an autoimmune response upon exposure to B cells. The B-cell antigen may be a cell surface-specific form of Ig, a complex of Ig and a membrane component, or a differentiation antigen which appears simultaneously with Ig during ontogeny.
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