Long-term-cultured mouse B-lymphocyte line: I. Establishment and characterization of mouse B-lymphocyte line

1987 
Abstract Mouse B-cell line was established by culturing anti-Thy-1 antibody and complement-treated splenic B cells with the conditioned medium of concanavalin A-stimulated spleen cell-culture supernatant. At the eighth week of culture, it was revealed that 100% of the long-term-cultured cells had both cytoplasmic and surface immunoglobulin. These cells were then maintained in the conditioned medium together with T-cell-depleted splenic and then splenic adherent feeder cells. Flow cytometric studies of the B-cell line showed that they had surface μ, δ, and κ but no γ, λ, Lyt-1, or Lyt-2. The growth of the B-cell line was dependent on the factor(s) derived from concanavalin A-stimulated conditioned medium. It was found that IL-2 was the major factor supporting the B-cell growth. The B-cell line did not secrete immunoglobulin spontaneously, but it could differentiate into antibody-forming cells through the stimulation of bacterial lipopolysaccharides. The techniques for obtaining mouse B-cell lines are reproducible in our laboratory and one of those lines has been propagated and maintained for 16 months to the present.
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