Literature DB >> 6449100

[Immunological specificity and the kinetics of T-suppressor induction in the immunization of mice with allogeneic spleen].

B D Brondz, A V Karaulov, I F Abronina.   

Abstract

A high dose immunization of mice with gamma-irradiated allogeneic spleen cells has been shown to induce, in a recipient spleen, specific suppressor T-cells, resistant to mitomycin C, which are capable of inhibiting DNA synthesis and, to a lesser degree, the generation of killer cells in the mixed lymphocyte culture (MLC). The maximum suppressor activity is reached on days 3-6 after immunization. Both reactions are blocked mostly in those stimulator cells which bear H-2 antigens used for immunization. In contrast, DNA synthesis is inhibited only slightly, if at all, when it is stimulated in MLC by third-party cells, even if these are added to the culture as a mixture with correspoding stimulators. Unlike X-irradiated allogeneic cells, the untreated ones induce a mixture of suppressors, T-cells and macrophages, with a considerable non-specific suppression. Untreated syngenic lymphoid cells induce less active non-specific suppressors with properties of macrophages.

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Year:  1980        PMID: 6449100

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Tsitologiia        ISSN: 0041-3771


  1 in total

1.  Requirement for the location of both appropriate and irrelevant H-2 antigens on the same stimulator cell for unspecific DNA-synthesis inhibition by the H-2-antigen-primed, specific suppressor T cells.

Authors:  B D Brondz; A V Karaulov; A V Chervonsky; Z K Blandova
Journal:  Immunogenetics       Date:  1982       Impact factor: 2.846

  1 in total

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