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Synthesis of RNA by Normal Mouse Spleen Cells after Stimulation with Antigen in vitro

Abstract

TREATMENT of animals or tissue cultures with antimetabolites1 or irradiation2 during the first few hours after antigenic stimulation profoundly affects the immune response. Dutton and Mishell3,4 reported that “hot” pulses of tritiated thymidine were lethal to proliferating antibody-forming cells when added to dissociated spleen cell cultures stimulated with sheep erythrocytes in vitro. Pulses given 24–32 h after antigen were lethal, whereas those given before were not. This suggested that little or no DNA synthesis occurred before 32 h in cells stimulated by antigen. We used the same approach to investigate the effects of “hot” pulses of tritiated uridine (3H-UR) to determine when antibody-forming cells and their precursors were actively synthesizing RNA. (Exogenous uridine is incorporated into the RNA of mouse tissues in vitro5.) We found that active RNA synthesis occurs during the first 24 h after antigenic stimulation as well as after 24 h, when active DNA synthesis occurs.

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ORTIZ-ORTIZ, L., JAROSLOW, B. Synthesis of RNA by Normal Mouse Spleen Cells after Stimulation with Antigen in vitro. Nature 221, 1153–1154 (1969). https://doi.org/10.1038/2211153a0

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