• 1 March 1967
    • journal article
    • Vol. 2 (2), 217-28
Abstract
A method is described for assessing the lymphocyte transformation of human leucocyte cultures induced by phytohaemagglutinin (PHA) and tuberculin purified protein derivative (PPD) by the measurement of the uptake of [14C]thymidine. The thymidine uptake of the cultures has been expressed as percentage of the total activity added. The mean basal uptake of twenty-two unstimulated cultures was 0·96%. The mean uptake of twenty-four PHA stimulated cultures was 19·5%, whilst the mean uptake of eleven PPD stimulated cultures from seven subjects, who were strongly positive on skin testing to tuberculin, was 20·1%. A rise of thymidine uptake was detected in five out of six tuberculin negative subjects (mean uptake 3·8%). Hydrocortisone hemisuccinate in final concentrations of 5 and 50 μg/ml usually reduced the thymidine uptake of unstimulated and PHA and PPD stimulated cultures, though the total cell count was reduced in only four out of ten cultures. An increase of thymidine from 1 to 64 μg/culture resulted in twoto three-fold increase in the uptake of thymidine; further increase of thymidine added to the cultures to 256 μg/culture resulted in a decrease of thymidine uptake.