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A plaque assay for enumerating antigen-sensitive cells in delayed-type hypersensitivity

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TLDR
By employing inhibitors of mitosis (colchicine, vinblastine, and thymidine) it was evident that the increase in PFU at least up to 48 hr was primarily due to initial antigen-reactive cells and not their progeny.
Abstract
A general method is described for enumerating antigen-sensitive lymphocytes obtained from individuals having delayed hypersensitivity, in this case from highly tuberculin-sensitive guinea pigs. The method is based on the observation that resting lymphocytes are generally unable to support replication of RNA viruses, whereas antigen-"activated" lymphocytes can. Lymph node lymphocytes from individual animals were cultured in the presence or absence of tuberculin purified protein derivatives (PPD). After various periods of time, the cells were infected either with Newcastle disease virus or vesicular stomatitis virus, and plated in agar over a monolayer of cells susceptible to the virus. Wherever a lymphocyte yielded infectious virus, a discrete plaque in the monolayer could be seen. The increase in plaques of the antigen-stimulated cells over the background of the control sample was taken as the number of antigen-sensitive cells in the population. When lymphocytes from normal guinea pigs or from guinea pigs immunized to produce only circulating antibody to PPD were similarly tested, no increase in plaque-forming units (PFU) was observed. The average increase in PFU due to antigenic stimulation varied from 1 per 1000 lymphocytes at 24 hr to 16 per 1000 lymphocytes at 96 hr. By employing inhibitors of mitosis (colchicine, vinblastine, and thymidine) it was evident that the increase in PFU at least up to 48 hr was primarily due to initial antigen-reactive cells and not their progeny.

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Plaque Formation in Agar by Single Antibody-Producing Cells

TL;DR: Distinct plaques, each of which is due to the release of hemolysin by a single antibody-forming cell, are revealed by complement after incubation, in an agar layer, of a mixture of Sheep red cells and lymphoid cells from a rabbit immunized with sheep red cells.
Book

The clonal selection theory of acquired immunity

F. M. Burnet
TL;DR: The clonal selection theory of acquired immunity is studied as a theory of selection for immunity in the context of infectious disease.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mechanism of a Reaction in Vitro Associated with Delayed-Type Hypersensitivity

TL;DR: The cell type responsible for inhibition by antigen of migration in vitro of peritoneal exudate cells obtained from tuberculin-hypersensitive guinea pigs was studied and elaborated into the medium a soluble material capable of inhibiting migration of normal exudates.
Book ChapterDOI

Cytotoxic effects of lymphoid cells in vitro.

TL;DR: The study of the various pathways by which lymphoid cells can become cytotoxic has been helpful for the understanding of effector role of these cells in cell-destructive reactions in general.
Journal ArticleDOI

Immune specific induction of interferon production in cultures of human blood lymphocytes.

TL;DR: The quantity of interferon produced by antigen stimulation was related to concentration of antigen over a relatively narrow range; with higher concentrations induction was decreased, and phytohemagglutinin-induced Interferon was primarily produced during the first 4 days in culture.
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