| Literature DB >> 323963 |
G S Hansen, B Dupont, V Faber, B K Jakobsen, F Juhl, L S Nielsen, A Svejgaard, M Thomsen, A Wiik.
Abstract
Specific HLA antibodies were used to eliminate donor and recipient cells, respectively, from lymphocyte suspensions prepared from the blood of a child who had been transplanted with bone marrow from an HLA-A- and HLA-B-incompatible, HLA-D-compatible donor. About 70% of the lymphocytes were of donor HLA type, the remaining of recipient type. The phytohemagglutinin-responsive lymphocytes were exclusively limited to the lymphocyte population carrying donor-type HLA antigens. Membrane immunofluorescence investigations of the donor and recipient populations showed a low percentage of IgM-positive lymphocytes in the donor population and an extremely high proportion of IgM-positive lymphocytes in the recipient population. About 90% of the donor lymphocytes were T cells, as judged by their capacity to form rosettes between sheep erythrocytes and T lymphocytes; no cells in the recipient cell population expressed this ability.Entities:
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Year: 1977 PMID: 323963 DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-3083.1977.tb00397.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Scand J Immunol ISSN: 0300-9475 Impact factor: 3.487