The timing of the first appearance of lymph follicles and germinal centres in various lymph nodes, and the
ways in which numbers of these and IgM-synthesising cells increase within the nodes, were investigated in
male and female C57Bl/6N mice aged from 4 d to 16 wk. The lymphoid organs examined were the Peyer's
patches, spleen, somatic (submandibular, deep cervical, brachial, axillary, inguinal and popliteal) and visceral
(mesenteric and lumbar) lymph nodes. Primary follicles appeared in most somatic lymph nodes 6 d after
birth. The number of follicles per node then increased rather sharply in larger lymph nodes and slowly in
smaller nodes, up to 28 d of age, reaching a level which varied according to the location of the node.
Thereafter, the number of follicles in the somatic lymph nodes increased only slightly to moderately,
reaching a peak or plateau at 8–12 wk. In the mesenteric (ileocaecal) nodes, primary follicles first appeared
at 12 d, then increased linearly during the suckling period and after weaning to reach a plateau at 8 wk of
age. Germinal centres appeared in the submandibular and mesenteric nodes at 28 d and their numbers
increased consistently in the latter, while remaining low in the former. The impact of possible ‘natural’
exogenous antigen stimulation of the various lymph nodes was estimated from the presence of IgM-synthesising cells and germinal centres. Differences between the patterns of age-dependent changes in the
numbers of lymph follicles observed in the somatic and mesenteric lymph nodes during their ontogeny are
discussed in relation to differences in the magnitude of the exogenous antigen stimulatory effect. We also
found that the variations in the numbers of lymph follicles produced in somatic lymph nodes at different
locations during the first 28 d after birth reflected differences in the dimensions of the body regions drained
by a particular somatic lymph node at this stage of development.