ABILITY OF BONE MARROW CELLS AND LYMPH NODE CELLS TO INDUCE TOLERANCE OF SKIN IN MHC-CONGENIC RATS

1995 ◽  
Vol 60 (11) ◽  
pp. 1602
Author(s):  
&NA;
Blood ◽  
1963 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
pp. 44-52 ◽  
Author(s):  
GEORGES MATHÉ ◽  
JEAN-LOUIS AMIEL ◽  
LÉON SCHWARZENBERG ◽  
ANNE-MARIE MERY ◽  
F. Lapeyraque

Abstract Preservation of a graft of lymph node cells or semi-allogenic bone marrow cells at 37 C. in Tyrode’s solution for 2 hours, which reduces the percentage of cells not permeable to eosin by half, has a statistically significant reducing effect on the frequency of acute or chronic secondary syndromes which occur in irradiated recipients. Preservation at 18 C. for 6 hours, which in the same way increases the percentage of cells permeable to eosin, does not have the same effect. These two methods of preserving bone marrow cells do not appreciably reduce the myeloid-restoring capacity of compatible or incompatible irradiated recipients. Application of these results to bone marrow grafting in clinical medicine is discussed.


1993 ◽  
Vol 56 (4) ◽  
pp. 962-963
Author(s):  
LISE DESQUENNE-CLARK ◽  
HIROMITSU KIMURA ◽  
WILLYS K. SILVERS

2018 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Demchenko

The effect of transplantation of syngeneic bone marrow cells (BMCs) after their contact in vitro with thymus-derived multipotent stromal cells (MSCs) for regeneration of damaged by cyclophosphamide immune system of mice was studied.Materials and methods. MSCs were obtained from C57BL/6 mice’s thymus by explants method. BMCs were obtained by flushing the femurs. BMCs were induced for 2 hours on the monolayer of thymus-derived MSCs. The immune deficiency of mice was modelled using cyclophosphamide injection. After that, cell transplantation was performed and the state of the immune system was assessed. The number of erythrocytes, hematocrit, hemoglobin concentration in the peripheral blood; the phases of the cell cycle and apoptosis of mesenteric lymph node cells were determined. The amount of antibody-producing cells in the spleen and the delayed hypersensitivity response was determined. The study of proliferative and cytotoxic activity of natural killer lymphocytes, the analysis of phagocytosis, spontaneous and induced bactericidal activity of peritoneal macrophages were performed.Results. It was shown that unlike intact bone marrow cells, BMCs induced by thymus-derived MSCs provided increased spontaneous proliferative activity of lymphocytes with a decrease in the number of lymph node cells in G0/G1 phase by 6.2 % and an increase the number of lymphocytes in S+G2/M phase by 28 % in comparison with the group of mice treated with cyclophosphamide, as well as the recovery of cellularity of the bone marrow, lymph nodes and spleen. At the same time in the lymph nodes, the number of cells in the apoptosis increased. BMCs induced by MSCs showed a pronounced negative effect on natural cytotoxicity, reducing its rates by 3 times compared with the group of cyclophosphamide-treated mice, and on adaptive immunity: the rates of delayed hypersensitivity response decreased by 1.7 times, number of antibody-producing cells by 1.8 times. Red blood cell regeneration was stimulated by intact BMCs, which was manifested by the normalization of hematocrit and hemoglobin and an increase in the number of reticulocytes in the blood by 2.2 times compared with the group of mice treated with cyclophosphamide.Conclusion. Transplanted BMCs improve erythropoiesis in mice after cyclophosphamide treatment, and BMCs, previously induced by thymus-derived MSCs, lose this ability. BMCs after co-culture are strongly activated to impact on the immune system, which is most likely due to the effect of contact interaction with thymus-derived MSCs, which is known, effectively affect hematopoietic cells and possess immunomodulatory properties.


1993 ◽  
Vol 56 (5) ◽  
pp. 1230-1232 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lise Desquenne-Clark ◽  
Hiromitsu Kimura ◽  
Leyla Naji ◽  
Willys K. Silvers

1972 ◽  
Vol 136 (2) ◽  
pp. 216-226 ◽  
Author(s):  
Henry F. McFarland ◽  
Diane E. Griffin ◽  
Richard T. Johnson

The viral-induced perivascular inflammatory response in Sindbis virus encephalitis of mice was shown to be immunologically specific. Mice were inoculated intracerebrally with Sindbis virus, and 24 hr later a single dose of cyclophosphamide was given which ablated the inflammatory response. 3 days after virus inoculation, cells and/or sera from specifically and nonspecifically sensitized donor mice were given, and the inflammatory reactions, virus content, and antibody response of recipients were examined 5 days later. Reconstitution of the viral inflammatory response required virus-specific sensitized lymph node cells and was enhanced when these lymph node cells were combined with bone marrow cells. Reconstitution was not achieved with Sindbis virus immune serum even when combined with nonspecifically sensitized cells. Combination of immune serum with Sindbis virus-sensitized cells did not produce an accentuation of the reaction. In distinction, reconstitution of the inflammatory reaction surrounding the stab wound was reconstituted with bone marrow cells from mice inoculated with Sindbis virus or control antigens. Reconstitution of the perivascular reaction was associated with a reduction in brain virus content. Although the transfer of Sindbis virus-sensitized lymph node cells and bone marrow cells resulted in the limited production of neutralizing antibody in the immunosuppressed recipient, the reduction in virus was significantly greater with the transfers of Sindbis virus-sensitized lymph node cells than with the passive transfer of immune serum alone.


1968 ◽  
Vol 128 (6) ◽  
pp. 1425-1435 ◽  
Author(s):  
David M. Lubaroff ◽  
Byron H. Waksman

Splenectomy or thymectomy of adult Lewis rats following sensitization with tubercle bacilli did not affect their ability to develop delayed skin lesions upon skin testing with PPD. The presence of the thymus also had no significant effect on reactivity of the recipients in passive transfer experiments. The passive transfer of tuberculin hypersensitivity with sensitized lymph node cells to thymectomized, irradiated recipients depended on the simultaneous or prior injection of normal bone marrow cells. When lymph node cell transfer was performed shortly after irradiation and injection of marrow, high doses of marrow cells (3.5–4.0 x 108 were required to permit eliciting reactions of reasonable intensity. If, however, periods of 7–10 days elapsed between the injection of bone marrow and sensitized lymph node cells, lower doses of marrow were sufficient for comparable reactions. Normal thymus, spleen, lymph node, or peritoneal exudate cells, even at high doses could not be substituted for the bone marrow in producing good tuberculin reactions.


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