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Clinical and Diagnostic Laboratory Immunology, Nov 1996, 710-716, Vol 3, No. 6
GA Miller, MF Hickey, MM D'Alesandro and BK Nicoll
Freezing techniques provide a means for repeating and extending
immunological assays with frozen aliquots of an individual's peripheral
blood mononuclear cell fraction. Lymphocytes which are stored frozen for a
limited time retain their ability to respond to polyclonal B-cell
activators, mitogens, and antigens of dental interest. Our studies extend
these previous findings by determining lymphocyte functional activity
following frozen storage for up to 100 weeks. In addition, the autologous
immune response was measured by spontaneous lymphocyte proliferation
following 0, 1, 40, and 60 weeks of frozen storage. Peak responses for all
individuals occurred at day 7 of incubation. The lymphocyte proliferative
response to the superantigens toxic shock syndrome toxin-1 (TSST-1) and
Staphylococcus enterotoxin A (SEA) were not changed after 100 weeks of
frozen storage. Maximum responses varied among the individuals but occurred
at equivalent stimulator concentrations. However, slopes generated from
data obtained following 0, 4, 13, 20, 30, 50, 88, and 100 weeks of frozen
storage showed no significant deviation from zero (P > 0.05) for all
individuals tested. After 100 weeks of storage, the total changes in
proliferative activity (counts per minute per week) were -2.1% +/- 16.8%
and -5.5% +/- 17.0% for TSST-1 and SEA, respectively. The lymphocyte
proliferative responses to pokeweed mitogen, concanavalin A, and sonicates
of two periodontal pathogens (Porphyromonas gingivalis and Actinobacillus
actinomycetemcomitans) following frozen storage were similar to those with
TSST-1 and SEA. These results indicate that peripheral blood mononuclear
cells stored frozen may serve as appropriate controls to monitor changes in
the disease state long-term periodontal treatment.
Copyright © 1996 by the American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Studies of proliferative responses by long-term-cryopreserved peripheral blood mononuclear cells to bacterial components associated with periodontitis
Geo-Centers, Inc., Fort Washington, Maryland, USA.
| Antimicrob. Agents Chemother. | Clin. Microbiol. Rev. | Infect. Immun. |
|---|---|---|
| J. Clin. Microbiol. | J. Virol. | ALL ASM JOURNALS |