Volume 13, Issue 7 pp. 571-575
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Genetic control of the response of chicken T lymphocytes to concanavalin A: cellular localization of the low responder defect

J. Richard Pink

Corresponding Author

J. Richard Pink

Basel Institute for Immunology, Basel

Basel Institute for Immunology, Grenzacher Straße 487, Postfach 4005, CH-4005 Basel 5, SwitzerlandSearch for more papers by this author
Olli Vainio

Olli Vainio

Basel Institute for Immunology, Basel

Search for more papers by this author
First published: 1983
Citations: 15

Abstract

Genetic variation in the response of chicken lymphocytes to the T cell mitogen concanavalin A (Con A) has previously been studied by assaying tritiated thymidine ([3H]dThd) uptake of cultured cells following mitogen stimulation. Our present results show, firstly, that low [3H]dThd uptake (e.g. in cultures of Con A-stimulated cells from low responder CB, CC or G-B1-lo birds) is correlated with low proliferative activity and with reduced capacity to form Con A-dependent T cell colonies in semisolid agar. Secondly, in cultures containing mixtures of cells from high and low responder birds, the cells from each partner respond independently to Con A (there is neither suppression of high responder, nor activation of low responder cell proliferation). Finally, Con A-stimulated cultures of high responder cells respond better to T cell growth factors, as well as producing more growth factor activity, than cultures of low responder cells. These results suggest that the basis for the low responder phenotype is an intrinsic inability of low responder T lymphocytes to respond to Con A by differentiating into growth factor-sensitive blast cells.

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