Abstract: | The effect of iron (Fe3+) and normal human liver ferritin on the proliferative response of normal human lymphocytes to tetanus toxoid was examined. This proliferative response involved memory T4+ lymphocytes as shown by a selective depletion study. Limit dilution analysis revealed that iron, present as ferric citrate, affected the initiation of clone development, and that concentrations of ferric citrate from 30 microM to 1 nM were able to reduce significantly the cloning efficiency of precursor T cells (up to 90% reduction). The reduced cloning frequency was not due to immunological suppression. Clone size was also reduced when iron was present during culture. In contrast, the presence of normal human liver ferritin during culture (concentration range: 300 micrograms/1-10,000 micrograms/1) had no effect on lymphocyte proliferation. The data indicate that low molecular weight iron (as ferric citrate) in concentrations similar to those which have been reported in the serum of patients with iron overload diseases, can interfere with antigen-specific lymphocyte responses and this may have implications for the development of infections and neoplasia in diseases of iron-overload. |