| Literature DB >> 3920053 |
E Houssaint, E Diez, F V Jotereau.
Abstract
A monoclonal antibody, designated T10A6, was produced by immunizing mice with H.B14 chicken thymocytes. T10A6, when tested by immunofluorescence, labeled 80% of thymocytes, and a subset of peripheral T cells: 20% of spleen leukocytes, 10% of blood leukocytes, 8% of bone marrow cells but less than 1% of bursal lymphocytes. Tissue distribution on polyethylene glycol sections showed that in the thymus T10A6 stained most cortical thymocytes and a portion of medullary cells. In the spleen, the positive cells appeared scattered mainly in the T-dependent areas. Ontogenic studies revealed that the antigen recognized was found in the chick embryo thymus from day 11 onward and the expression of this antigen on thymocytes reached the adult level from day 13. The first positive cells were detected in the spleen on day 13 of embryonic life. T10A6 (IgG1) precipitated a 65-kDa material from thymocytes. This is the first description of a monoclonal antibody recognizing a peripheral T cell subpopulation in chicken.Entities:
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Year: 1985 PMID: 3920053 DOI: 10.1002/eji.1830150319
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Immunol ISSN: 0014-2980 Impact factor: 5.532