Abstract
The response to sheep red blood cells has been studied in the lymph nodes draining their site of injection in normal mice, and in thymectomized, irradiated, bone-marrow injected mice with and without a reconstituting thymus graft. By using a chromosome marker to differentiate between cells derived from the bone-marrow and thymus graft it has proved possible to show that the immune response should be thought of in terms of at least two cell populations. Cells of thymic origin are stimulated to mitotic activity in the interfollicular cortex, and their activity precedes both antibody production and morphological signs of activity in the follicular regions. Mitotic divisions of cells of bone-marrow origin reached a peak a day later than did the thymic cells and their activity was sustained. Follicular enlargement and germinal centre production were coincident in time both with antibody production and bone-marrow cell mitotic activity. Lymph nodes of animals lacking a thymic influence showed only minor changes after antigenic stimulation and these were restricted to the follicular regions. There appeared to be only a small quantitative difference between the responses of normal and of reconstituted animals.
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