• 1 June 1979
    • journal article
    • Vol. 122 (6), 2548-53
Abstract
Polyclonal activation of murine splenic B lymphocytes to secrete immunoglobulin was shown to be subject to regulation by splenic T cells. By admixture of separated B and T cell populations it was demonstrated that normal fresh splenic T cells were able to augment polyclonal B cell responsiveness to LPS up to several-fold. Optimal collaboration between these two cell types ensued when they were co-cultured in equal numbers. T cell-mediated enhancement of polyclonal B cell responses was dependent upon the ability of T cells to divide and was manifested upon T cell interaction with B cells soon after culture initiation. Originally expounded as a one-signal phenomenon, polyclonal activation of lymphocytes by LPS is, under the circumstances described, attributable instead to two distinct, nonspecific signals acting in concert. The observation that T cells from LPS-nonresponder (C3H/HeJ) mice were deficient in the capacity to enhance polyclonal B cell responsiveness of B cells derived from responder (C3H/HeN) mice implied a direct action of LPS on the involved T cells as well as an active role for the T cell signal in this immunoregulatory event. The novel observation of a functional T cell defect in LPS responsiveness in the C3H/HeJ mouse is discussed in terms of its other cellular defects.