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DISTRIBUTION AMONG THE γ-GLOBULIN MOLECULES OF DIFFERENT GENETICALLY DETERMINED ANTIGENIC SPECIFICITIES IN THE GM SYSTEM

Isolated myeloma proteins and anti-Rh antibodies were utilized for determination of the distribution among the γ-globulin molecules of various Gm(b) and Gm(f) determinants. All of these genetic factors are as a rule inherited together in Caucasians, but not in other races. The Gm(b) determinants, ex...

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Autores principales: Mårtensson, Lars, Kunkel, Henry G.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1965
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2138091/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/4158754
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author Mårtensson, Lars
Kunkel, Henry G.
author_facet Mårtensson, Lars
Kunkel, Henry G.
author_sort Mårtensson, Lars
collection PubMed
description Isolated myeloma proteins and anti-Rh antibodies were utilized for determination of the distribution among the γ-globulin molecules of various Gm(b) and Gm(f) determinants. All of these genetic factors are as a rule inherited together in Caucasians, but not in other races. The Gm(b) determinants, except (b(2)), were found together in the same Caucasian myeloma globulins of the Vi H chain group, which never carried Gm(f) or (b(2)). The Gm(f) and (b(2)) determinants were found together in other myeloma globulins, of the We group. Anti-Rh antibody molecules appeared to be similar to myeloma molecules in these respects. A few myeloma proteins and anti-Rh antibodies were encountered which reacted with some but not other anti-Gm(b) or anti-Gm(f) reagents; the only available Vi type myeloma protein from a Negro, specifically lacked the Gm(b(3)) factor. The observations might be explained by the following hypothesis: In Caucasians with the common Gm(f) Gm(b) gene complex the Gm(b) antigenic determinants, except (b(2)), co-occur in certain molecules, which contain a polypeptide chain determined by the Gm(b) gene; the Gm(f) and (b(2)) determinants co-occur in other molecules, which contain a polypeptide chain determined by the Gm(f) gene. Individuals that lack some Gm(b) or Gm(f) determinants most likely have a gene partly different from Gm(b) or Gm(f). The value of studies with myeloma proteins from individuals of different racial groups was apparent from this study. One myeloma protein from a Chinese was unique in that it was both Gm(a+) and Gm(f+).
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spelling pubmed-21380912008-04-17 DISTRIBUTION AMONG THE γ-GLOBULIN MOLECULES OF DIFFERENT GENETICALLY DETERMINED ANTIGENIC SPECIFICITIES IN THE GM SYSTEM Mårtensson, Lars Kunkel, Henry G. J Exp Med Article Isolated myeloma proteins and anti-Rh antibodies were utilized for determination of the distribution among the γ-globulin molecules of various Gm(b) and Gm(f) determinants. All of these genetic factors are as a rule inherited together in Caucasians, but not in other races. The Gm(b) determinants, except (b(2)), were found together in the same Caucasian myeloma globulins of the Vi H chain group, which never carried Gm(f) or (b(2)). The Gm(f) and (b(2)) determinants were found together in other myeloma globulins, of the We group. Anti-Rh antibody molecules appeared to be similar to myeloma molecules in these respects. A few myeloma proteins and anti-Rh antibodies were encountered which reacted with some but not other anti-Gm(b) or anti-Gm(f) reagents; the only available Vi type myeloma protein from a Negro, specifically lacked the Gm(b(3)) factor. The observations might be explained by the following hypothesis: In Caucasians with the common Gm(f) Gm(b) gene complex the Gm(b) antigenic determinants, except (b(2)), co-occur in certain molecules, which contain a polypeptide chain determined by the Gm(b) gene; the Gm(f) and (b(2)) determinants co-occur in other molecules, which contain a polypeptide chain determined by the Gm(f) gene. Individuals that lack some Gm(b) or Gm(f) determinants most likely have a gene partly different from Gm(b) or Gm(f). The value of studies with myeloma proteins from individuals of different racial groups was apparent from this study. One myeloma protein from a Chinese was unique in that it was both Gm(a+) and Gm(f+). The Rockefeller University Press 1965-10-01 /pmc/articles/PMC2138091/ /pubmed/4158754 Text en Copyright © 1965 by The Rockefeller University Press 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
Mårtensson, Lars
Kunkel, Henry G.
DISTRIBUTION AMONG THE γ-GLOBULIN MOLECULES OF DIFFERENT GENETICALLY DETERMINED ANTIGENIC SPECIFICITIES IN THE GM SYSTEM
title DISTRIBUTION AMONG THE γ-GLOBULIN MOLECULES OF DIFFERENT GENETICALLY DETERMINED ANTIGENIC SPECIFICITIES IN THE GM SYSTEM
title_full DISTRIBUTION AMONG THE γ-GLOBULIN MOLECULES OF DIFFERENT GENETICALLY DETERMINED ANTIGENIC SPECIFICITIES IN THE GM SYSTEM
title_fullStr DISTRIBUTION AMONG THE γ-GLOBULIN MOLECULES OF DIFFERENT GENETICALLY DETERMINED ANTIGENIC SPECIFICITIES IN THE GM SYSTEM
title_full_unstemmed DISTRIBUTION AMONG THE γ-GLOBULIN MOLECULES OF DIFFERENT GENETICALLY DETERMINED ANTIGENIC SPECIFICITIES IN THE GM SYSTEM
title_short DISTRIBUTION AMONG THE γ-GLOBULIN MOLECULES OF DIFFERENT GENETICALLY DETERMINED ANTIGENIC SPECIFICITIES IN THE GM SYSTEM
title_sort distribution among the γ-globulin molecules of different genetically determined antigenic specificities in the gm system
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2138091/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/4158754
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