Stimulation of humoral antibody formation by polyanions. III. Restoration of the immune response to sheep red blood cells by polyanions in thymectomized and lethally irradiated mice protected with bone marrow cells

1971 ◽  
Vol 1 (4) ◽  
pp. 302-304 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Diamantstein ◽  
B. Wagner ◽  
Johanna L'Age-Stehr ◽  
Inge Beyse ◽  
Maria V. Odenwald ◽  
...  
1969 ◽  
Vol 129 (4) ◽  
pp. 757-774 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nabih I. Abdou ◽  
Maxwell Richter

Irradiated rabbits given allogeneic bone marrow cells from normal adult donors responded to an injection of sheep red blood cells by forming circulating antibodies. Their spleen cells were also capable of forming many plaques using the hemolysis in gel technique, and were also capable of undergoing blastogenesis and mitosis and of incorporating tritiated thymidine upon exposure to the specific antigen in vitro. However, irradiated rabbits injected with allogeneic bone marrow obtained from rabbits injected with sheep red blood cells 24 hr prior to sacrifice (primed donors) were incapable of mounting an immune response after stimulation with sheep red cells. This loss of reactivity by the bone marrow from primed donors is specific for the antigen injected, since the immune response of the irradiated recipients to a non-cross-reacting antigen, the horse red blood cell, is unimpaired. Treatment of the bone marrow donors with high-titered specific antiserum to sheep red cells for 24 hr prior to sacrifice did not result in any diminished ability of their bone marrow cells to transfer antibody-forming capacity to sheep red blood cells. The significance of these results, with respect to the origin of the antigen-reactive and antibody-forming cells in the rabbit, is discussed.


2003 ◽  
Vol 3 (10-11) ◽  
pp. 1537-1547 ◽  
Author(s):  
Oladipo A. Oredipe ◽  
Paulette M. Furbert-Harris ◽  
Ibrahim Laniyan ◽  
Walter M. Griffin ◽  
Rajagopalan Sridhar

1969 ◽  
Vol 130 (6) ◽  
pp. 1243-1261 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. M. Shearer ◽  
G. Cudkowicz

Marrow cells and thymocytes of unprimed donor mice were transplanted separately into X-irradiated syngeneic hosts, with or without sheep erythrocytes (SRBC). Antigen-dependent changes in number or function of potentially immunocompetent cells were assessed by retransplantation of thymus-derived cells with fresh bone marrow cells and SRBC; of marrow-derived cells with fresh thymocytes and SRBC; and of thymus-derived with marrow-derived cells and SRBC. Plaque-forming cells (PFC) of the direct (IgM) and indirect (IgG) classes were enumerated in spleens of secondary host mice at the time of peak responses. By using this two-step design, it was shown (a) that thymus, but not bone marrow, contained antigen-reactive cells (ARC) capable of initiating the immune response to SRBC (first step), and (b) that the same antigen complex that activated thymic ARC was required for the subsequent interaction between thymus-derived and marrow cells and/or for PFC production (second step). Thymic ARC separated from marrow cells but exposed to SRBC proliferated and generated specific inducer cells. These were the cells that interacted with marrow precursors of PFC to form the elementary units for plaque responses to SRBC, i.e. the class- and specificity-restricted antigen-sensitive units. It was estimated that each ARC generated 80–800 inducer cells in 4 days by way of a minimum of 6–10 cell divisions. On the basis of the available evidence, a simple model was outlined for cellular events in the immune response to SRBC.


Blood ◽  
1997 ◽  
Vol 90 (6) ◽  
pp. 2148-2159 ◽  
Author(s):  
Harshal H. Nandurkar ◽  
Lorraine Robb ◽  
David Tarlinton ◽  
Louise Barnett ◽  
Frank Köntgen ◽  
...  

Abstract Interleukin-11 (IL-11) is a pleiotropic growth factor with a prominent effect on megakaryopoiesis and thrombopoiesis. The receptor for IL-11 is a heterodimer of the signal transduction unit gp130 and a specific receptor component, the α-chain (IL-11Rα). Two genes potentially encode the IL-11Rα: the IL11Ra and IL11Ra2 genes. The IL11Ra gene is widely expressed in hematopoietic and other organs, whereas the IL11Ra2 gene is restricted to only some strains of mice and its expression is confined to testis, lymph node, and thymus. To investigate the essential actions mediated by the IL-11Rα, we have generated mice with a null mutation of IL11Ra (IL11Ra−/−) by gene targeting. Analysis of IL11Ra expression by Northern blot and reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction, as well as the absence of response of IL11Ra−/− bone marrow cells to IL-11 in hematopoietic assays, further confirmed the null mutation. Compensatory expression of the IL11Ra2 in bone marrow cells was not detected. IL11Ra−/− mice were healthy with normal numbers of peripheral blood white blood cells, hematocrit, and platelets. Bone marrow and spleen contained normal numbers of cells of all hematopoietic lineages, including megakaryocytes. Clonal cultures did not identify any perturbation of granulocyte-macrophage (GM), erythroid, or megakaryocyte progenitors. The number of day-12 colony-forming unit-spleen progenitors were similar in wild-type and IL11Ra−/− mice. The kinetics of recovery of peripheral blood white blood cells, platelets, and bone marrow GM progenitors after treatment with 5-flurouracil were the same in IL11Ra−/− and wild-type mice. Acute hemolytic stress was induced by phenylhydrazine and resulted in a 50% decrease in hematocrit. The recovery of hematocrit was comparable in IL11Ra−/− and wild-type mice. These observations indicate that IL-11 receptor signalling is dispensable for adult hematopoiesis.


Blood ◽  
1977 ◽  
Vol 49 (3) ◽  
pp. 407-413 ◽  
Author(s):  
JE Fuhr ◽  
N Gengozian ◽  
M Overton

Abstract Bone marrow cells from adult and abortus primates (marmosets) were incubated in vitro to determine their responsiveness to L-thyroxine. 3H- leucine incorporation into purified globin chains was the parameter assayed to determine responsiveness. Bone marrow from spontaneously aborted animals consistently was stimulated by the presence of physiologic levels of L-thyroxine. Bone marrow cells from adult animals were unaffected by the hormone.


Blood ◽  
2000 ◽  
Vol 95 (3) ◽  
pp. 829-836 ◽  
Author(s):  
Timothy W. Austin ◽  
Suzan Salimi ◽  
Gabor Veres ◽  
Franck Morel ◽  
Heini Ilves ◽  
...  

Using a mouse bone marrow transplantation model, the authors evaluated a Moloney murine leukemia virus (MMLV)-based vector encoding 2 anti-human immunodeficiency virus genes for long-term expression in blood cells. The vector also encoded the human nerve growth factor receptor (NGFR) to serve as a cell-surface marker for in vivo tracking of transduced cells. NGFR+ cells were detected in blood leukocytes of all mice (n=16; range 16%-45%) 4 to 5 weeks after transplantation and were repeatedly detected in blood erythrocytes, platelets, monocytes, granulocytes, T cells, and B cells of all mice for up to 8 months. Transgene expression in individual mice was not blocked in the various cell lineages of the peripheral blood and spleen, in several stages of T-cell maturation in the thymus, or in the Lin−/loSca-1+ and c-kit+Sca-1+ subsets of bone marrow cells highly enriched for long-term multilineage-reconstituting activity. Serial transplantation of purified NGFR+c-kit+Sca-1+bone marrow cells resulted in the reconstitution of multilineage hematopoiesis by donor type NGFR+ cells in all engrafted mice. The authors concluded that MMLV-based vectors were capable of efficient and sustained transgene expression in multiple lineages of peripheral blood cells and hematopoietic organs and in hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) populations. Differentiation of engrafting HSC to peripheral blood cells is not necessarily associated with dramatic suppression of retroviral gene expression. In light of earlier studies showing that vector elements other than the long-terminal repeat enhancer, promoter, and primer binding site can have an impact on long-term transgene expression, these findings accentuate the importance of empirically testing retroviral vectors to determine lasting in vivo expression.


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