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Science 7 August 1964:
Vol. 145. no. 3632, pp. 607 - 609
DOI: 10.1126/science.145.3632.607

Articles

Inhibition of Antibody Plaque Formation by Sensitized Lymphoid Cells: Rapid Indicator of Transplantation Immunity

Herman Friedman 1

1 Departments of Microbiology, Albert Einstein Medical Center, and Temple University School of Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Spleen cell suspensions obtained from mice immunized with sheep erythrocytes form localized zones of hemolysis ("antibody plaques") when incubated in agar gel containing sheep red blood cells and complement. Plaque formation can be inhibited by prior incubation in vitro with spleen cell suspensions from another strain of mice previously sensitized to the first by spleen cell transplant. Suppression of plaque formation was found to be quantitatively related to the number of cells incubated and apparently reflected a homograft reaction in vitro of one spleen cell population against another. Plaque inhibition may be a useful indicator of transplantation immunity.


THIS ARTICLE HAS BEEN CITED BY OTHER ARTICLES:
Mixed Lymphocyte Cultures Produce Effector Cells: Model in vitro for Allograft Rejection.
P. Hayry and V. Defendi (1970)
Science 168, 133-135
   Abstract »    PDF »



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Science. ISSN 0036-8075 (print), 1095-9203 (online)