Induction and suppression of immunoglobulin synthesis in cultures of human lymphocytes: effects of pokeweed mitogen and Staphylococcus aureus Cowan I.

Abstract
The synthesis and secretion of immunoglobulins by human peripheral blood mononuclear cells in cultures stimulated with pokeweed mitogen or Staphylococcus aureus Cowan I were evaluated by enumeration of cells containing cytoplasmic immunoglobulins and cells actively secreting immunoglobulins, and by quantitation of immunoglobulins released into culture supernatants. The two mitogens caused comparable stimulation of immunoglobulin production; however, in contrast to pokeweed mitogen, S. aureus was active in cultures depleted of T lymphocytes, and its stimulatory effects were resistant to the influence of suppressor T cells generated by co-stimulation with concanavalin A or by preincubation without mitogenic stimulus. These results indicate distinct pathways of induction and suppression of immunoglobulin synthesis for these two polyclonal B cell activators, and suggest that stimulation by S. aureus is less thymus dependent than that induced by pokeweed mitogen.