On the molecular basis of T helper cell function. II. B-lymphocyte promotor factors: I-A-restricted production and their apparent antigen-independent, direct interaction with B cells
- PMID: 6234651
- DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-3083.1984.tb00966.x
On the molecular basis of T helper cell function. II. B-lymphocyte promotor factors: I-A-restricted production and their apparent antigen-independent, direct interaction with B cells
Abstract
The differentiation of Ig+ B cells into plaque-forming cells is dependent on antigen and factors produced by T cells and/or macrophages. We describe here the production of T-cell factors termed lymphocyte promotor factors (LPF). A foetal calf serum-specific T-cell line and its clones synthesize LPF, which is defined as factors that polyclonally stimulate normal spenic T cells to differentiate into cytotoxic T lymphocytes (T-LPF) and normal splenic B cells to differentiate into plaque-forming cells into (PFC) (B-LPF) in the apparent absence of specific antigen. The proliferation of and the B-LPF production of all T-cell clones tested were foetal calf serum-specific and I-Ab-restricted. Some of these clones produced only T-LPF, some clones produced only B-LPF, and some clones produced both T-LPF and B-LPF. B-LPF stimulate the polyclonal differentiation of Ig+ B cells into PFC without the apparent need for helper T cells, is different from T-LPF, and induces almost exclusively IgM PFC. The B-LPF described in the present paper are compared with previously described T-cell factors, which stimulate antigen-specific B-cell responses or bystander B-cell responses. The conclusion is that B-LPF are probably different from B-cell growth factors, T-cell replacing factors, allogeneic effector factors, and interleukin 2.
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