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GENETICS OF RESTRICTED ANTIBODIES TO STREPTOCOCCAL GROUP POLYSACCHARIDES IN MICE : I. STRAIN DIFFERENCES OF ISOELECTRIC FOCUSING SPECTRA OF GROUP A HYPERIMMUNE ANTISERA
The immune response of nine inbred and one outbred strain of mice to the streptococcal group A polysaccharide was investigated with respect to magnitude and restriction. Analytical isoelectric focusing served as a tool to estimate the degree of restriction of Group A polysaccharide-specific antibodi...
Autores principales: | , |
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Formato: | Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
The Rockefeller University Press
1974
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2139689/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/4133618 |
Sumario: | The immune response of nine inbred and one outbred strain of mice to the streptococcal group A polysaccharide was investigated with respect to magnitude and restriction. Analytical isoelectric focusing served as a tool to estimate the degree of restriction of Group A polysaccharide-specific antibodies. It proved feasible to distinguish low and intermediate from high responder strains, and to delineate strain-specificity of isoelectric focusing spectra of the immune sera. For example, immune sera of BALB/c mice, restricted high responders, and of C57BL/6 mice, heterogeneous low responders, had distinct focusing properties. Responsiveness was a dominant autosomal genetic trait in C57BL/6 x BALB/c F(1) hybrid mice, irrespective of the maternal and the paternal genotype; the immune sera of these mice had their own, rather uniform isoelectric focusing spectra whereby structural genes of the low responder strain were expressed to predominant levels in 81% of the hybrids. Responsiveness in C57BL/6 x BALB/c F(2) progeny segregated into 79% high and 21% low responders, and showed no genetic linkage to the following characteristics: hair color, sex, H-2 type, and Ig allotype of the heavy chain. The isoelectric focusing properties of these immune sera indicated segregation into patterns like BALB/c mice (40%), F(1) hybrids (48%), and C57BL/6 mice (12%). Since this segregation is independent of any of the above criteria in these F(2) mice a regulatory gene(s) is postulated that controls the clonal pattern of the immune response. |
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