
doi: 10.1007/bf01727487
pmid: 6755054
Using a reverse hemolytic protein A plaque assay, spontaneous and pokeweed mitogen (PWM)-induced immunoglobulin (Ig) secretion was determined in peripheral blood from 22 patients with B1-chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), one patient with B2-CLL, and one patient with suppressor T-CLL. Diagnoses were established by cytological and histological criteria as well as several marker analyses. Lymphocytes from B1- and B2-CLL patients were unable to secrete Ig either spontaneously or after PWM stimulation. In T-CLL lymphocytes, spontaneous Ig secretion was suppressed very probably by the OKT-8-positive leukemic population, since, after cultivation with PWM, a normal Ig secretion could be demonstrated which was paralleled by a decrease in the OKT-8-positive cells. Cocultivation experiments with freshly isolated, unseparated lymphocytes from normal subjects and lymphocytes from patients were of no informational value, since isolated normal B-cells alone already showed a high rate of Ig secretion. However, coculture experiments with separated subpopulations after PWM stimulation revealed an intrinsic B-cell defect in lymphocytes from B1-CLL patients, whereas their T-lymphocytes were found to be normal helper cells.
Adult, B-Lymphocytes, T-Lymphocytes, Antibody Formation, Humans, Hemolytic Plaque Technique, Middle Aged, Lymphocyte Activation, Aged, Leukemia, Lymphoid
Adult, B-Lymphocytes, T-Lymphocytes, Antibody Formation, Humans, Hemolytic Plaque Technique, Middle Aged, Lymphocyte Activation, Aged, Leukemia, Lymphoid
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