1. Relationship between a spleen-derived immunosuppressive peptide 'SDIP' and the 'Facteur thymique sérique' (FTS): biochemical and biological comparison of the two factors.
- Author
-
Lenfant M, Millerioux L, Blazsek I, and Duchange N
- Subjects
- Animals, Antibody-Producing Cells drug effects, Chemical Phenomena, Chemistry, Physical, Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid, Electrophoresis, Lymphocyte Activation drug effects, Mice, Mice, Inbred Strains, Peptides isolation & purification, Immunosuppressive Agents pharmacology, Peptides pharmacology, Suppressor Factors, Immunologic, Thymic Factor, Circulating pharmacology, Thymus Hormones pharmacology
- Abstract
A spleen-derived immunosuppressive peptide (SDIP) has been purified to homogeneity. Its physicochemical properties (electrophoretic mobility, u.v. spectra, absence of dansyl derivative) and its enzymatic susceptibilities (proteolytic enzymes, RNase, and DNase) were similar to those of the thymic hormone 'FTS'. SDIP and FTS were eluted with identical retention times in high performance liquid chromatography analysis in three different systems. When tested in sheep cell rosettes, and in the FTS radioimmunoassay in J.F. Bach's laboratory, SDIP presented an activity similar to FTS. In order to compare the thymic hormone to SDIP the biological activity of FTS was determined in in vivo and in in vitro humoral immunity reactions to a T-dependent antigen. As SDIP, FTS inhibited in vivo and in vitro the 19S-bearing cell formation during the last step of the differentiation of the lymphocytes, in the same range of concentration. The two factors appeared to stimulate the incorporation of [3H]-thymidine into the DNA of short-term cultures of thymocytes. The similarity of biological properties of SDIP and FTS together with the similarity observed in the physico-chemical and biochemical properties led to the conclusion that bovine spleen contains a factor similar to FTS.
- Published
- 1983