Murray P D, Kagnoff M F
J Immunol. 1987 Apr 15;138(8):2439-44.
The in vitro antibody response to dextran B1355S, a thymus-independent Type 2 antigen, requires T cell-derived lymphokines but is not thought to require an activation signal from an antigen-specific T helper cell. The present study demonstrates that there are two dextran-reactive B cell populations in BALB/c mice with respect to the T cell requirements for the generation of antibody-forming cells. One population found among dextran-reactive spleen B cells from 12- to 14-mo-old BALB/c mice generated anti-dextran PFC in the presence of B cell growth factor (BCGF II) and IL 2 or the combination of BCGF II, IL 2, and IFN-gamma. A second population of dextran-reactive B cells found in spleen and Peyer's patches of 2-mo-old unprimed mice did not respond to these same lymphokines, but did generate anti-dextran plaque-forming cells in the presence of Thy-1.2+, L3T4+ T cells from Peyer's patches. However, splenic B cells obtained from 2-mo-old mice that had been primed with dextran 2 to 3 days after birth were shown to be responsive to the same lymphokines as dextran-reactive B cells from 12- to 14-mo-old mice. These results suggest that previous priming with dextran B1355S induces a dextran-specific B cell population that can be activated to antibody-forming cells in the presence of antigen and T cell-derived lymphokines, whereas a second, unprimed population requires an additional activation signal from L3T4+ T cells.