Affinity-purified, fluorochrome-tagged F(ab')(2) antibody fragments specific for heavy (mu) chains of Rana pipiens IgM were prepared from hyperimmune rabbit sera. By using two-color immunofluorescent procedures we observed that (1) the first cells expressing IgM, termed pre-B cells, lack detectable quantities of membrane or surface IgM but contain detectable quantities of cytoplasmic IgM (smu(-)/cmu(+)), (2) sIgM(+) B cells were the second type of IgM containing cell to appear in development, and (3) plasma cells, which contain copious quantities of cIgM, were the final phenotype to appear in the development of B cells expressing IgM. These cells were first observed in the pronephros of the developing urogenital system. Shortly after their appearance in the pronephros, cells in B lineages were observed in the liver. These observations (1) are consistent with recent studies of B lymphopoiesis in the aorta-gonad-mesonephros (AGM) region in endothermic vertebrates, including mice, (2) suggest that there are fundamental ontogenetic and phylogenetic similarities between cells and tissues of developing vertebrate immune systems, and (3) evoke questions concerning the possible function(s) of lymphocytes in developing anurans up to metamorphosis and beyond.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/(sici)1097-010x(20000601)286:7<736::aid-jez8>3.0.co;2-g | DOI Listing |
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