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CELLULAR HETEROGENEITY IN THE PRODUCTION OF AN ANTI-HAPTEN ANTIBODY

Single lymph node cells from rats immunized with a conjugate of 3-iodo-4-hydroxy-5-nitrophenyl acetic acid chloride (NIP) and chicken globulin were tested against either NIP or NNP conjugated with bacteriophage. NNP is related to NIP but has a nitro group instead of iodine. The conjugated phages wer...

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Autor principal: Mäkelä, O.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1967
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2138302/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/4165500
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author Mäkelä, O.
author_facet Mäkelä, O.
author_sort Mäkelä, O.
collection PubMed
description Single lymph node cells from rats immunized with a conjugate of 3-iodo-4-hydroxy-5-nitrophenyl acetic acid chloride (NIP) and chicken globulin were tested against either NIP or NNP conjugated with bacteriophage. NNP is related to NIP but has a nitro group instead of iodine. The conjugated phages were still infective but easily inactivated by anti-hapten sera at a serum concentration of 10(–7). Phages carrying a related hapten were less sensitive to antibody than phages conjugated with the immunogenic hapten. When NIP-T2 and NNP-T4 conjugates were incubated in microdrops containing a single lymph node cell from an anti-NIP animal, strong inactivation of either or both phages occurred in some cases. For the reasons given in the text this inactivation was considered to be due to anti-NIP antibody produced by the cell in the microdrop. Inactivation of the two kinds of phages by the anti-NIP cells was highly nonrandom; some cells inactivated almost all of the 1700 or so NIP-T2 phages in the drop but left almost all NNP-T4 phages viable. Others had a very strong cross-reaction and inactivated equal proportions (up to 75%) of both phages. The remaining active cells exhibited an intermediate degree of cross-reaction. Control experiments indicated that there was a true cellular heterogeneity in the specificity of the anti-NIP produced by different cells. They suggested that the observed heterogeneity of specificities was limited to the structure of the hapten and was not influenced by the structure of the carrier. As all the cells studied were induced by a single hapten, the observed cellular heterogeneity was probably not caused by a heterogeneous antigen. It seems more likely that latent heterogeneity was present in the cells before they were stimulated by the NIP hapten.
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spelling pubmed-21383022008-04-17 CELLULAR HETEROGENEITY IN THE PRODUCTION OF AN ANTI-HAPTEN ANTIBODY Mäkelä, O. J Exp Med Article Single lymph node cells from rats immunized with a conjugate of 3-iodo-4-hydroxy-5-nitrophenyl acetic acid chloride (NIP) and chicken globulin were tested against either NIP or NNP conjugated with bacteriophage. NNP is related to NIP but has a nitro group instead of iodine. The conjugated phages were still infective but easily inactivated by anti-hapten sera at a serum concentration of 10(–7). Phages carrying a related hapten were less sensitive to antibody than phages conjugated with the immunogenic hapten. When NIP-T2 and NNP-T4 conjugates were incubated in microdrops containing a single lymph node cell from an anti-NIP animal, strong inactivation of either or both phages occurred in some cases. For the reasons given in the text this inactivation was considered to be due to anti-NIP antibody produced by the cell in the microdrop. Inactivation of the two kinds of phages by the anti-NIP cells was highly nonrandom; some cells inactivated almost all of the 1700 or so NIP-T2 phages in the drop but left almost all NNP-T4 phages viable. Others had a very strong cross-reaction and inactivated equal proportions (up to 75%) of both phages. The remaining active cells exhibited an intermediate degree of cross-reaction. Control experiments indicated that there was a true cellular heterogeneity in the specificity of the anti-NIP produced by different cells. They suggested that the observed heterogeneity of specificities was limited to the structure of the hapten and was not influenced by the structure of the carrier. As all the cells studied were induced by a single hapten, the observed cellular heterogeneity was probably not caused by a heterogeneous antigen. It seems more likely that latent heterogeneity was present in the cells before they were stimulated by the NIP hapten. The Rockefeller University Press 1967-07-01 /pmc/articles/PMC2138302/ /pubmed/4165500 Text en Copyright © 1967 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
Mäkelä, O.
CELLULAR HETEROGENEITY IN THE PRODUCTION OF AN ANTI-HAPTEN ANTIBODY
title CELLULAR HETEROGENEITY IN THE PRODUCTION OF AN ANTI-HAPTEN ANTIBODY
title_full CELLULAR HETEROGENEITY IN THE PRODUCTION OF AN ANTI-HAPTEN ANTIBODY
title_fullStr CELLULAR HETEROGENEITY IN THE PRODUCTION OF AN ANTI-HAPTEN ANTIBODY
title_full_unstemmed CELLULAR HETEROGENEITY IN THE PRODUCTION OF AN ANTI-HAPTEN ANTIBODY
title_short CELLULAR HETEROGENEITY IN THE PRODUCTION OF AN ANTI-HAPTEN ANTIBODY
title_sort cellular heterogeneity in the production of an anti-hapten antibody
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2138302/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/4165500
work_keys_str_mv AT makelao cellularheterogeneityintheproductionofanantihaptenantibody