The Journal of Experimental Medicine
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The Journal of Experimental Medicine, Vol 130, 165-184, Copyright © 1969 by The Rockefeller University Press


ARTICLE

CELLS INVOLVED IN THE IMMUNE RESPONSE : XI. IDENTIFICATION OF THE ANTIGEN-REACTIVE CELL AS THE TOLERANT CELL IN THE IMMUNOLOGICALLY TOLERANT RABBIT



Nabih I. Abdou M.D.1 and Maxwell Richter M.D.1

1 From The Harry Webster Thorp Laboratories, Division of Immunochemistry and Allergy, McGill University Clinic, Royal Victoria Hospital, Montreal 2, Quebec, Canada

Rabbits were made immunologically tolerant to either human serum albumin or bovine gamma globulin by the neonatal administration of antigen. At 10 wk of age, they were challenged with the tolerogenic antigen and found to be non-responsive. However, these tolerant rabbits could respond with humoral antibody formation directed toward the tolerogenic antigen if they were treated with normal, allogeneic bone marrow or bone marrow obtained from a rabbit made tolerant toward a different antigen. They were incapable of responding if they were given bone marrow obtained from a rabbit previously made tolerant to the tolerogenic antigen. Irradiated rabbits were unable to respond if treated with tolerant bone marrow, but could respond well if given normal bone marrow. Since it has previously been demonstrated that the antibody-forming cell, in an irradiated recipient of allogeneic bone marrow, is of recipient and not donor origin, the data presented strongly indicate that the unresponsive cell in the immunologically tolerant rabbit is the antigen-reactive cell.

Submitted on March 5, 1969


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