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Effects of lymphocytes from the thymus and lymph nodes on differentiation of hemopoietic spleen colonies in irradiated mice

✍ Scribed by Nancy L. Basford; Joan W. Goodman


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1974
Tongue
English
Weight
910 KB
Volume
84
Category
Article
ISSN
0021-9541

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Hemopoietic colonies were counted macroscopically and microscopically in spleens of hybrid mice seven or eight days after they had been irradiated and given parental bone marrow in donor‐host combinations exhibiting poor growth. Colonies counted microscopically were classified as to differentiation pathway. Lymphocytes from the thymus or lymph nodes were injected into some recipients at several different dosages and lymphocyte: bone marrow (L:B) ratios. In confirmation of earlier work it was found that thymocytes increased the number and size of colonies in recipients of marrow. A shift of differentiation toward granulopoiesis was also seen when thymocytes were given, although erythropoietic colonies were still the most frequently seen type except at very high L:B ratios. Lymph node lymphocytes shifted the pattern more markedly toward granulopoiesis, even at low L:B ratios. When lymphocytes from either source were given without marrow, only a few colonies could be found in recipients, and if differentiated they were almost exclusively granulopoietic. Irradiation (900 R) of lymphocyte donors reversed the shift so that a normal pattern of differentiation, like that resulting from marrow alone, was seen; irradiated lymphocytes were nonetheless capable of augmenting the size and total number of hemopoietic colonies.


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