Affiliation:
1. From the John Collins Warren Laboratories of the Huntington Memorial Hospital of Harvard University, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts 02114
Abstract
The immunosuppressant cyclophosphamide easily induces specific immunological tolerance in CBA mice, but is unable to produce an immunological defect in adult thymectomized animals. In contrast, lethal (and sublethal) irradiation does not induce tolerance but readily brings out the deficit of thymectomy. Furthermore, bone marrow cells which protect lethally irradiated animals do not prevent drug deaths.
This sharp dichotomy indicates that the drug and radiation influence the lymphoid system by different mechanisms. It seems likely from the work of others that cyclophosphamide action is markedly dependent on rapid cell proliferation, while radiation is not. From this it follows that the cell which must be depleted to expose the immune defect of the thymectomized animal is a nonproliferating lymphoid element with the slow mitotic rate of the marrow stem cell.
Publisher
Rockefeller University Press
Subject
Immunology,Immunology and Allergy
Cited by
8 articles.
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