| Literature DB >> 6444649 |
E L Reinherz, P C Kung, G Goldstein, S F Schlossman.
Abstract
A hybridoma-secreting monoclonal antibody was produced from the spleen cells of a mouse immunized with human thymocytes. This hybridoma antibody, termed OKT5, was reactive by indirect immunofluorescence with 80% of human thymocytes but only 20% of peripheral blood T cells. Moreover, OKT5 was unreactive with normal B cells, null cells, and macrophages at any dilution tested. A similar pattern of reactivity was seen with an equine antiserum to human thymocytes termed anti-TH2. Fluorescence-activated cell sorting demonstrated that the OKT5 antibody reactivity on peripheral T cells was restricted to the majority of the previously defined TH2+ subpopulation. In functional studies, the OKT5+ subset, like the TH2+ subset, proliferated well to the mitogen Con A and to alloantigens, and contained cytotoxic effector cells after sensitization in MLC, and suppressor effector cells after activation with Con A. In addition, like the TH2+ T cell, the OKT+ T cell was virtually unresponsive to soluble antigen. Thus, the OKT5 monoclonal antibody is reactive with the cytotoxic/suppressor T cell subset. OKT5 should provide an important probe to assess the status of suppressor cells in human disease.Entities:
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Year: 1980 PMID: 6444649
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol ISSN: 0022-1767 Impact factor: 5.422