Spontaneous reverse hemolytic plaque formation: III. Monocyte-mediated suppression of elevated plaque formation in autoimmune disease

The capacity of monocytes to suppress immunoglobulin secretion by B cells in human peripheral blood was investigated in vitro using spontaneous reverse hemolytic plaque formation in a liquid assay system. Monocyte suppression was not demonstrable in 10 healthy subjects. However, in 15 patients with...

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Veröffentlicht in:Clinical immunology and immunopathology 1982, Vol.24 (3), p.386-395
Hauptverfasser: Burns, Gordon F., Librach, Clifford L., Frazer, Ian H., Kronborg, Ian J., Mackay, Ian R.
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container_end_page 395
container_issue 3
container_start_page 386
container_title Clinical immunology and immunopathology
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creator Burns, Gordon F.
Librach, Clifford L.
Frazer, Ian H.
Kronborg, Ian J.
Mackay, Ian R.
description The capacity of monocytes to suppress immunoglobulin secretion by B cells in human peripheral blood was investigated in vitro using spontaneous reverse hemolytic plaque formation in a liquid assay system. Monocyte suppression was not demonstrable in 10 healthy subjects. However, in 15 patients with immunopathic diseases, including systemic lupus erythematosus, chronic active hepatitis, and inflammatory bowel disease, removal of monocytes by plastic adherence resulted in up to 50-fold increases in the numbers of plaques formed by B lymphocytes, in most cases greatly exceeding the upper limit of normal. When the patients' lymphocyte preparations were reconstituted, either with autologous monocytes or with normal allogeneic monocytes, the increased plaque numbers were suppressed up to 10-fold; however, monocytes from patients did not reduce the numbers of spontaneous plaques formed by lymphocytes from normal subjects. In serial dilution experiments, the cells from patients with immunopathic diseases, in contrast to those from normal subjects, did not show a linear reduction in the numbers of plaques obtained with increasing dilutions of cells, suggesting that the suppressive influence of monocytes could be diluted out. The suppressive influence of monocytes appears to require a specific physical interaction between these cells and activated B lymphocytes. Our finding that the suppressive activity of monocytes on plaque-forming B cells is apparent only in immunopathic diseases wherein B cells are hyperactivated implies that this monocyte suppression is itself dependent on the activity of B cells.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/0090-1229(82)90009-5
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subjects Autoimmune Diseases - immunology
Cell Adhesion
Cell Separation
Chronic Disease
Hemolytic Plaque Technique
Hepatitis - immunology
Humans
Immune Tolerance
Lupus Erythematosus, Systemic - immunology
Lymphocytes - immunology
Monocytes - immunology
Monocytes - metabolism
Time Factors
title Spontaneous reverse hemolytic plaque formation: III. Monocyte-mediated suppression of elevated plaque formation in autoimmune disease
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