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Amplification of plaque-forming cells in the spleen after intracloacal antigen stimulation in neonatal chicken.
36
Citations
8
References
1979
Year
Laboratory ImmunologyImmunologyBlood CellPathologyNeonatal ChickensEducationVeterinary ResearchAntigen ProcessingDirect Plaque-forming CellsPlaque-forming CellsNeonatal ChickenEmbryologyHematologySame AntigenAnimal PhysiologyIntracloacal Antigen StimulationVeterinary PathologyAutoimmunityHumoral ImmunityTheriogenologyDevelopmental BiologyAnimal ScienceVeterinary ScienceMedicinePoultry Science
Neonatal chickens were primed by multiple or a single injection with sheep red blood cells (SRBC) into the cloacal lumen and then were challenged by intravenous injection with the same antigen. Direct plaque-forming cells (PFC) in the spleen were markedly increased shortly after intracloacal priming. This enhancing effect was antigen specific and was abolished by surgical bursectomy 24 h after intracloacal priming. A similar effect was also found in mature adult chickens, although the degree of enhancement was far less than that found in neonatal chickens. These results suggest that a certain stage of B-cell differentiation in the bursa of Fabricius (BF) is regulated by antigenic stimulation.
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