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The ultrastructure of the abdominal lymph nodes cortex in rats during primary and secondary immune response (a special reference to dendritic reticulum cells and interdigitating cells).

The stimulation of coeliac rat lymph nodes was performed by intraperitoneal injections of typhoid vaccine and was unique for the primary immune response and repeated after 6 weeks for the secondary response. The light and electron microscopic observations showed for the primary response, an early germinal center reaction, which might be accounted for by a background of continuous stimulation of the coeliac nodes, stemming from the digestive tract. The dendritic reticulum cells (DRC), considered typical for the B area, were located at the borderline between the germinal center and the mantle zone. Their cytoplasmic extensions penetrated the lymphocyte-lymphoblastic center, surrounding most of the germinal center cells. The marginal zone and the paracortex reacted as a whole, the interdigitating cells (IDC) being the dominant feature. An explanation would be that the marginal zone can be penetrated by T cells and connected IDCs, thus, the B and T areas seem to be largely interspersed. The results suggest that IDCs are cells of direct monocytic origin.

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