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The Journal of Immunology, Vol 133, Issue 6 2910-2914, Copyright © 1984 by American Association of Immunologists
ARTICLES |
MG Goodman and WO Weigle
The mechanism by which increased numbers of antigen-responsive B cells are generated in the presence of antigen and the C8-substituted guanine ribonucleoside, 8-mercaptoguanosine (8MGuo), has been investigated. Augmentation of the primary humoral response of splenocytes to antigen cannot be ascribed to the additive effects of the underlying antigen- specific response and the nonspecific (polyclonal) response induced by 8MGuo. This is clear from a consideration of the magnitude of the responses involved, as well as from a murine model (the SJL mouse) that does not generate a nonspecific response to the substituted nucleoside but responds to it with the usual degree of immunoenhancement in the presence of antigen. Other approaches suggest that two mechanisms are involved in adjuvanticity, one whereby preexisting antigen-specific B cells undergo clonal expansion, and one in which cells not normally participating in the response are recruited in the absence of clonal expansion. The latter mechanism appears to be the dominant one insofar as models in which 8MGuo-induced proliferation fails to occur (such as after irradiation, or in the SJL mouse) nonetheless exhibit strong adjuvant effects. Analysis of precursor frequency of antigen-specific B cells indicates that for each mature, antigen-responsive B cell present in adult murine spleen, an average of four additional cells can be recruited by the conjoint actions of antigen and 8MGuo. One group subject to such recruitment is the immature antigen-specific B cell, whose degree of functional maturity is accelerated in the presence of antigen and 8MGuo.
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