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GENETIC CHARACTERS OF HUMAN γ-GLOBULINS IN MYELOMA PROTEINS

The genetic factors Gm(a), Gm(b), Gm(x), and Inv(a), Inv(b) described for normal human γ-globulin were all found in different myeloma proteins. A single myeloma protein never contained more than one product of alternate alleles even in heterozygous individuals. However, factors determined by the two...

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Autores principales: Harboe, M., Osterland, C. K., Mannik, M., Kunkel, H. G.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1962
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2137565/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/13952722
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author Harboe, M.
Osterland, C. K.
Mannik, M.
Kunkel, H. G.
author_facet Harboe, M.
Osterland, C. K.
Mannik, M.
Kunkel, H. G.
author_sort Harboe, M.
collection PubMed
description The genetic factors Gm(a), Gm(b), Gm(x), and Inv(a), Inv(b) described for normal human γ-globulin were all found in different myeloma proteins. A single myeloma protein never contained more than one product of alternate alleles even in heterozygous individuals. However, factors determined by the two different loci were often found in the same myeloma protein. The Gm(a) character of the myeloma protein parallelled that of the normal γ-globulin of the same serum in most cases. In contrast, the Gm(b) character was usually absent in the myeloma protein when it was directly demonstrable in the normal γ-globulin. The myeloma proteins from six Negroes were Gm(a+b-), whereas the normal γ-globulin was Gm(a+b+). This indicates that the effect of gene Gm (b) is similar in Negroes and whites, even though its relation to gene Gm (a) is different in the two races. Gm factors were found only in the 7S γ-globulin type myelomas and not in other products of plasma cell tumors. Inv characters were, however, present in all four types of proteins studied, namely 7S and 19S γ-globulins, β(2A)-globulins, and Bence Jones proteins. In two instances, genetic heterogeneity of the protein products was demonstrated suggesting the proliferation of more than one clone of plasma cells in some multiple myeloma patients. The accumulated evidence obtained in this study strongly suggested that the presence and absence of genetic characters was compatible with the concept that myeloma proteins were closely analogous to individual moieties in the spectrum of normal γ-globulins rather than truly abnormal proteins. Their study offered evidence of a heterogeneity of genetic characters among the normal γ-globulins in a given individual. It also appears probable that in normal individuals single plasma cells have a restricted capacity to express genetic information in their protein product.
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spelling pubmed-21375652008-04-17 GENETIC CHARACTERS OF HUMAN γ-GLOBULINS IN MYELOMA PROTEINS Harboe, M. Osterland, C. K. Mannik, M. Kunkel, H. G. J Exp Med Article The genetic factors Gm(a), Gm(b), Gm(x), and Inv(a), Inv(b) described for normal human γ-globulin were all found in different myeloma proteins. A single myeloma protein never contained more than one product of alternate alleles even in heterozygous individuals. However, factors determined by the two different loci were often found in the same myeloma protein. The Gm(a) character of the myeloma protein parallelled that of the normal γ-globulin of the same serum in most cases. In contrast, the Gm(b) character was usually absent in the myeloma protein when it was directly demonstrable in the normal γ-globulin. The myeloma proteins from six Negroes were Gm(a+b-), whereas the normal γ-globulin was Gm(a+b+). This indicates that the effect of gene Gm (b) is similar in Negroes and whites, even though its relation to gene Gm (a) is different in the two races. Gm factors were found only in the 7S γ-globulin type myelomas and not in other products of plasma cell tumors. Inv characters were, however, present in all four types of proteins studied, namely 7S and 19S γ-globulins, β(2A)-globulins, and Bence Jones proteins. In two instances, genetic heterogeneity of the protein products was demonstrated suggesting the proliferation of more than one clone of plasma cells in some multiple myeloma patients. The accumulated evidence obtained in this study strongly suggested that the presence and absence of genetic characters was compatible with the concept that myeloma proteins were closely analogous to individual moieties in the spectrum of normal γ-globulins rather than truly abnormal proteins. Their study offered evidence of a heterogeneity of genetic characters among the normal γ-globulins in a given individual. It also appears probable that in normal individuals single plasma cells have a restricted capacity to express genetic information in their protein product. The Rockefeller University Press 1962-10-31 /pmc/articles/PMC2137565/ /pubmed/13952722 Text en ©Copyright, 1962, by The Rockefeller Institute This article is distributed under the terms of an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike–No Mirror Sites license for the first six months after the publication date (see http://www.rupress.org/terms). After six months it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 4.0 Unported license, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Harboe, M.
Osterland, C. K.
Mannik, M.
Kunkel, H. G.
GENETIC CHARACTERS OF HUMAN γ-GLOBULINS IN MYELOMA PROTEINS
title GENETIC CHARACTERS OF HUMAN γ-GLOBULINS IN MYELOMA PROTEINS
title_full GENETIC CHARACTERS OF HUMAN γ-GLOBULINS IN MYELOMA PROTEINS
title_fullStr GENETIC CHARACTERS OF HUMAN γ-GLOBULINS IN MYELOMA PROTEINS
title_full_unstemmed GENETIC CHARACTERS OF HUMAN γ-GLOBULINS IN MYELOMA PROTEINS
title_short GENETIC CHARACTERS OF HUMAN γ-GLOBULINS IN MYELOMA PROTEINS
title_sort genetic characters of human γ-globulins in myeloma proteins
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2137565/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/13952722
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