STIMULATION OF ALLOGENEIC LYMPHOCYTES BY SKIN EPIDERMAL CELLS IN THE RAT

Abstract
The ability of skin epidermal cells to induce allogeneic lymphocytes into proliferation was examined in mixed skin cell-lymphocyte culture reaction (MSLR). The stimulating capacity of skin cells was reduced significantly by trypsin digestion, although the damage was repaired by incubation at 37.degree. C for 3 h. The optimal concentration of mitomycin C for treatment of stimulating cells in the MSLR differed from that in mixed lymphocyte culture reaction (MLR). Irradiation rendered them 3-4 times more stimulatory than did mitomycin C. Removal of adherent cells from responding cells by passage through a nylon-wool column gave a substantial elevation of the MSLR. The lymphocytes co-cultured with skin cells in the primary MSLR incorporated 3H-thymidine, with the peak at the 6th day of culture. If the lymphocytes primed in the MSLR were restimulated with skin cells from the same stimulating strain, the primed lymphocytes responded promptly and in great magnitude.