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A RECEPTOR FOR ANTIBODY ON B LYMPHOCYTES : II. IMMUNOCHEMICAL AND ELECTRON MICROSCOPY CHARACTERISTICS

Binding of antibody to the surface of B lymphocytes was shown to involve the Fc piece of the immunoglobulin molecule. This property was not shared equally by all immunoglobulin classes as revealed by direct binding and inhibition studies. Total IgG globulin was found to label cells more heavily than...

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Autores principales: Basten, A., Warner, N. L., Mandel, T.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1972
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2139141/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/5061977
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author Basten, A.
Warner, N. L.
Mandel, T.
author_facet Basten, A.
Warner, N. L.
Mandel, T.
author_sort Basten, A.
collection PubMed
description Binding of antibody to the surface of B lymphocytes was shown to involve the Fc piece of the immunoglobulin molecule. This property was not shared equally by all immunoglobulin classes as revealed by direct binding and inhibition studies. Total IgG globulin was found to label cells more heavily than IgM, and IgG1-containing fractions more heavily than IgG2 fractions lacking IgG1. The ability of various purified myeloma proteins to inhibit attachment of antibody to B cells was examined. Pretreatment of B cells with excess IgG(2a), IgA, or light chain proteins failed to inhibit, whereas IgG1 proteins and to a lesser extent Ig(2b) and IgM proteins at the same concentrations did so. At lower protein concentrations, IgG1 myeloma protein alone retained the capacity to inhibit binding. The conclusion was reached that the receptor on B cells for antibody has a marked predilection for the IgG1 class. Although IgM and IgG(2b) antibody may bind, they do so with lower avidity and probably in insignificant amounts if IgG1 antibody is present in excess. No evidence was found to implicate complement in the binding process. For example, heat-inactivated sera at high dilution retained the ability to label B cells, while the use of purified low molecular weight anticomplementary factor, a potent inhibitor of C'3, did not interfere with the formation of the bond between antibody and cell surface. The failure of anti-mouse immunoglobulin F(ab)'(2) fragments to prevent access of antibody to B cells implied that the antibody-binding receptor and antigen-binding (immunoglobulin) receptor are discrete entities on the B cell membrane. Despite this, a marked similarity between their surface distribution was observed on electron microscopy. The antibody-binding receptor was shown to be a marker for mature B cells. It did not appear to be present on hematopoietic precursor stem cells and was lost during differentiation to antibody-forming cells.
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spelling pubmed-21391412008-04-17 A RECEPTOR FOR ANTIBODY ON B LYMPHOCYTES : II. IMMUNOCHEMICAL AND ELECTRON MICROSCOPY CHARACTERISTICS Basten, A. Warner, N. L. Mandel, T. J Exp Med Article Binding of antibody to the surface of B lymphocytes was shown to involve the Fc piece of the immunoglobulin molecule. This property was not shared equally by all immunoglobulin classes as revealed by direct binding and inhibition studies. Total IgG globulin was found to label cells more heavily than IgM, and IgG1-containing fractions more heavily than IgG2 fractions lacking IgG1. The ability of various purified myeloma proteins to inhibit attachment of antibody to B cells was examined. Pretreatment of B cells with excess IgG(2a), IgA, or light chain proteins failed to inhibit, whereas IgG1 proteins and to a lesser extent Ig(2b) and IgM proteins at the same concentrations did so. At lower protein concentrations, IgG1 myeloma protein alone retained the capacity to inhibit binding. The conclusion was reached that the receptor on B cells for antibody has a marked predilection for the IgG1 class. Although IgM and IgG(2b) antibody may bind, they do so with lower avidity and probably in insignificant amounts if IgG1 antibody is present in excess. No evidence was found to implicate complement in the binding process. For example, heat-inactivated sera at high dilution retained the ability to label B cells, while the use of purified low molecular weight anticomplementary factor, a potent inhibitor of C'3, did not interfere with the formation of the bond between antibody and cell surface. The failure of anti-mouse immunoglobulin F(ab)'(2) fragments to prevent access of antibody to B cells implied that the antibody-binding receptor and antigen-binding (immunoglobulin) receptor are discrete entities on the B cell membrane. Despite this, a marked similarity between their surface distribution was observed on electron microscopy. The antibody-binding receptor was shown to be a marker for mature B cells. It did not appear to be present on hematopoietic precursor stem cells and was lost during differentiation to antibody-forming cells. The Rockefeller University Press 1972-02-29 /pmc/articles/PMC2139141/ /pubmed/5061977 Text en Copyright © 1972 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
Basten, A.
Warner, N. L.
Mandel, T.
A RECEPTOR FOR ANTIBODY ON B LYMPHOCYTES : II. IMMUNOCHEMICAL AND ELECTRON MICROSCOPY CHARACTERISTICS
title A RECEPTOR FOR ANTIBODY ON B LYMPHOCYTES : II. IMMUNOCHEMICAL AND ELECTRON MICROSCOPY CHARACTERISTICS
title_full A RECEPTOR FOR ANTIBODY ON B LYMPHOCYTES : II. IMMUNOCHEMICAL AND ELECTRON MICROSCOPY CHARACTERISTICS
title_fullStr A RECEPTOR FOR ANTIBODY ON B LYMPHOCYTES : II. IMMUNOCHEMICAL AND ELECTRON MICROSCOPY CHARACTERISTICS
title_full_unstemmed A RECEPTOR FOR ANTIBODY ON B LYMPHOCYTES : II. IMMUNOCHEMICAL AND ELECTRON MICROSCOPY CHARACTERISTICS
title_short A RECEPTOR FOR ANTIBODY ON B LYMPHOCYTES : II. IMMUNOCHEMICAL AND ELECTRON MICROSCOPY CHARACTERISTICS
title_sort receptor for antibody on b lymphocytes : ii. immunochemical and electron microscopy characteristics
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2139141/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/5061977
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