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Isolation and Identification of the Naturally Occurring, Newborn Spleen‐Associated Suppressor Cells
Author(s) -
PEELER K.,
WIGZELL H.,
PECK A. B.
Publication year - 1983
Publication title -
scandinavian journal of immunology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.934
H-Index - 88
eISSN - 1365-3083
pISSN - 0300-9475
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-3083.1983.tb00811.x
Subject(s) - isolation (microbiology) , identification (biology) , spleen , suppressor , biology , genetics , immunology , bioinformatics , gene , ecology
Spleens from newborn mice less than 6–7 days of age contain ‘naturally occurring’ suppressor cell populations that are able to inhibit nonspecifically immune responses of third‐party adult spleen cells and alloreactivity in the newborn spleen per se. Isolation of the effectors of this suppressor activity reveals that they are not classical T lymphocytes but, instead, a mixed population of cells of the monocytc series (monoblast/promonocyte/ monocyte) plus mast cells. This mixed population apparently can elicit its suppressor activity in part through secretion of soluble, in vitro culture‐stable material, which in turn initiates activation of the suppressorcell/limb of the immune response. These activities, nevertheless, modulate most strongly the early activation events of T‐cell responses and can result in complete suppression of alloreactive helper and cytotoxic T lymphocytedevelopment. Suppressor activity by mast cells can be demonstrated by degranulation, whereas suppressor activity by monocytes appears inherent in the newborn population. Thus, there are now at least three cell populations in the neonatc spleen—mast cells, monocytes. and T lymphocytes—which caneffect suppressor activity.

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