Unstable chromosome aberrations (acentrics, dicentrics, rings) have been observed in tuberculin-stimulated leukocyte cultures from three patients up to six months after therapeutic irradiation. This is considered evidence that human blood contains immunologically committed, long-lived, nondividing small lymphocytes which retain the latent capacity to proliferate when re-exposed to the sensitizing antigen. "Immunologic memory" may reside in such cells, which, because they are not continually dividing, need not have undergone genetic alteration in becoming immunologically committed.

This content is only available as a PDF.
Sign in via your Institution