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Review
. 1986;6(4):287-93.

Previously unrecognized functions of the spleen: development and maintenance of immune competence and regulation

  • PMID: 2430757
Review

Previously unrecognized functions of the spleen: development and maintenance of immune competence and regulation

F Borek. Crit Rev Immunol. 1986.

Abstract

To examine the influence of the spleen on the development and function of the immune system, the effects of the inborn asplenia in Dh/+ mice were studied and compared with those of neonatal and postnatal splenectomies. The antibody responses to particulate and soluble antigens in Dh/+ mice were weaker than those in normal controls. This was correlated with the inability of Dh/+ T-lymphocytes to cooperate with B cells in cell-transfer experiments. A defective helper function was also found in T-cells of neonatally splenectomized mice, but it could be restored partly by delaying the removal of spleen until 6 days after birth and totally by infusing autologous spleen cells immediately after splenectomy. By contrast, transfer of spleen cells to Dh/+ mice did not restore the helper function of their T-lymphocytes. Unlike their defective humoral immunity, the cellular immune responses of Dh/+ mice are normal as expressed in their ability to reject foreign grafts and to be contact-sensitized by chemicals. Thus, the presence of the spleen at birth is essential for the development of helper T-cells but not cytotoxic or effector T-cells. Furthermore, evidence is reviewed for the splenic influence on the capacity of other lymphoid organs to trap particulate antigens and for the role of the spleen in the maturation of suppressor T-cells throughout the life span.

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