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ANTIBODY RESPONSES TO ANTIGENIC DETERMINANTS OF INFLUENZA VIRUS HEMAGGLUTININ : I. Thymus Dependence of Antibody Formation and Thymus Independence of Immunological Memory

Using immunodiffusion methods it has been shown that purified hemagglutinin (HA) extracted from two related strains of influenza A viruses (A/PR8/34 and A/FM1/47) have two distinct antigenic determinants, or groups of determinants. One determinant is cross-reactive while the other is strain-specific...

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Autores principales: Virelizier, Jean-Louis, Postlethwaite, Roy, Schild, Geoffrey C., Allison, Anthony C.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1974
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2139740/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/4139233
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author Virelizier, Jean-Louis
Postlethwaite, Roy
Schild, Geoffrey C.
Allison, Anthony C.
author_facet Virelizier, Jean-Louis
Postlethwaite, Roy
Schild, Geoffrey C.
Allison, Anthony C.
author_sort Virelizier, Jean-Louis
collection PubMed
description Using immunodiffusion methods it has been shown that purified hemagglutinin (HA) extracted from two related strains of influenza A viruses (A/PR8/34 and A/FM1/47) have two distinct antigenic determinants, or groups of determinants. One determinant is cross-reactive while the other is strain-specific. Antisera raised in normal mice against HA were shown to contain two populations of antibody molecules, each directed against one of the determinants. Immunization of thymus-deprived (TXBM) mice showed a strong thymus dependence of antibody formation to HA. However, the thymus dependence of antibody formation against the cross-reactive determinant could be overcome by repeated inoculations of HA in TXBM mice, indicating a different handling of two portions of the same molecule by the immunological system. Strong, secondary-type responses to the strain-specific determinant were observed in primed thymus-deprived mice after reconstitution with virgin thymus cells, showing that specific immunological memory was elicited by this determinant despite the absence of detectable antibody secretion. These findings are interpreted as examples of immunological recognition and memory mediated by B lymphocytes and discussed in terms of mechanisms of T and B lymphocyte co-operation. It is suggested that the helper effect of T lymphocytes is exerted at a late stage in the differentiation of specific populations of B cells into antibody-secreting cells.
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spelling pubmed-21397402008-04-17 ANTIBODY RESPONSES TO ANTIGENIC DETERMINANTS OF INFLUENZA VIRUS HEMAGGLUTININ : I. Thymus Dependence of Antibody Formation and Thymus Independence of Immunological Memory Virelizier, Jean-Louis Postlethwaite, Roy Schild, Geoffrey C. Allison, Anthony C. J Exp Med Article Using immunodiffusion methods it has been shown that purified hemagglutinin (HA) extracted from two related strains of influenza A viruses (A/PR8/34 and A/FM1/47) have two distinct antigenic determinants, or groups of determinants. One determinant is cross-reactive while the other is strain-specific. Antisera raised in normal mice against HA were shown to contain two populations of antibody molecules, each directed against one of the determinants. Immunization of thymus-deprived (TXBM) mice showed a strong thymus dependence of antibody formation to HA. However, the thymus dependence of antibody formation against the cross-reactive determinant could be overcome by repeated inoculations of HA in TXBM mice, indicating a different handling of two portions of the same molecule by the immunological system. Strong, secondary-type responses to the strain-specific determinant were observed in primed thymus-deprived mice after reconstitution with virgin thymus cells, showing that specific immunological memory was elicited by this determinant despite the absence of detectable antibody secretion. These findings are interpreted as examples of immunological recognition and memory mediated by B lymphocytes and discussed in terms of mechanisms of T and B lymphocyte co-operation. It is suggested that the helper effect of T lymphocytes is exerted at a late stage in the differentiation of specific populations of B cells into antibody-secreting cells. The Rockefeller University Press 1974-11-30 /pmc/articles/PMC2139740/ /pubmed/4139233 Text en Copyright © 1974 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
Virelizier, Jean-Louis
Postlethwaite, Roy
Schild, Geoffrey C.
Allison, Anthony C.
ANTIBODY RESPONSES TO ANTIGENIC DETERMINANTS OF INFLUENZA VIRUS HEMAGGLUTININ : I. Thymus Dependence of Antibody Formation and Thymus Independence of Immunological Memory
title ANTIBODY RESPONSES TO ANTIGENIC DETERMINANTS OF INFLUENZA VIRUS HEMAGGLUTININ : I. Thymus Dependence of Antibody Formation and Thymus Independence of Immunological Memory
title_full ANTIBODY RESPONSES TO ANTIGENIC DETERMINANTS OF INFLUENZA VIRUS HEMAGGLUTININ : I. Thymus Dependence of Antibody Formation and Thymus Independence of Immunological Memory
title_fullStr ANTIBODY RESPONSES TO ANTIGENIC DETERMINANTS OF INFLUENZA VIRUS HEMAGGLUTININ : I. Thymus Dependence of Antibody Formation and Thymus Independence of Immunological Memory
title_full_unstemmed ANTIBODY RESPONSES TO ANTIGENIC DETERMINANTS OF INFLUENZA VIRUS HEMAGGLUTININ : I. Thymus Dependence of Antibody Formation and Thymus Independence of Immunological Memory
title_short ANTIBODY RESPONSES TO ANTIGENIC DETERMINANTS OF INFLUENZA VIRUS HEMAGGLUTININ : I. Thymus Dependence of Antibody Formation and Thymus Independence of Immunological Memory
title_sort antibody responses to antigenic determinants of influenza virus hemagglutinin : i. thymus dependence of antibody formation and thymus independence of immunological memory
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2139740/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/4139233
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