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Journal ArticleDOI

Failure of certain cytotoxic lymphocytes to respond mitotically to phytohaemagglutinin.

I. C. M. Maclennan, +1 more
- 19 Sep 1970 - 
- Vol. 227, Iss: 5264, pp 1246-1248
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TLDR
Evidence is provided that this mechanism brings about homograft rejection in donors made tolerant to graft antigens made tolerant of antigen-antibody complexes has been described.
Abstract
CYTOTOXIC activity by lymphocytes has attracted considerable interest because of its possible role in the rejection of grafted tissues and neoplastic cells. Damage to target cell caused by lymphoid cells was first demonstrated in 1960 by Govaerts1, and there were several subsequent reports of immunologically specific cytotoxicity towards target cells by lymphoid cells from sensitized donors. These have recently been reviewed extensively2. The situation was complicated when cytotoxic activity by lymphocytes from apparently unsensitized donors was demonstrated in 1964 by Holm et al.3, in cultures of lymphoid cells and target cells when phytohaemagglutmin (PHA) was incorporated into the medium. Holm and Perlmann5 later showed that several other circumstances could lead to immunologically non-specific cytotoxic activity by lymphocytes. The induction of cytotoxicity in all these systems seemed to correlate well with increased mitogenic activity in the lymphocyte population tested. Recently it has been shown that immunologically nonspecific cytotoxic activity can be evoked from lymphocytes when the target cell antigens are complexed with certain antibody5–7. This effect has been demonstrated in a wide variety of species including man8, and does not seem to require the participation of complement components. We have previously reported that much of the immunologically specific target cell damage by lymphocytes in rats is dependent on immunoglobulin sensitization of target cells9. The sensitizing antibody, in this case, is synthesized by lymphocytes which are not themselves cytotoxic. Bubenik, Perlmann and Hasek10 have provided evidence that this mechanism brings about homograft rejection in donors made tolerant to graft antigens. Although there has been no report of antibody-induced cytotoxicity being associated with blast transformation, transformation in response to antigen-antibody complexes has been described11,12.

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Book ChapterDOI

Cell-Mediated Cytotoxicity, Allograft Rejection, and Tumor Immunity

TL;DR: Specific cell-mediated cytotoxicity in vitro can be divided into three categories according to the nature of the effector cells, which is most often highly specific and requires intimate contact rather than release of diffusible toxic factors.
Journal ArticleDOI

A receptor for antibody on b lymphocytes : i. method of detection and functional significance

TL;DR: It was proposed that the existence of a receptor of this kind may provide a rational explanation for antibody-dependent killing of target cells and may prove of importance in antigen concentration particularly during the secondary response.
Book ChapterDOI

In Vitro Approaches to the Mechanism of Cell-Mediated Immune Reactions

TL;DR: This chapter focusses on the study of cell-mediated immunity in vitro, principally in terms of explaining the effector process of the response, with general assumptions that all cell- mediated immune reactions have a common basis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Antibody-dependent cell-mediated (k cell) cytotoxicity against isolated hepatocytes in chronic active hepatitis

TL;DR: In 6 patients the addition of 5 mug aggregated IgG significantly reduced cytotoxicity from 54% +/-15 to 13% +/- 15 (mean +/- 1S.D.) suggesting that K cells may be the effector cell in an antibody-dependent, cell-mediated reaction directed against a liver-specific membrane lipoprotein.
Journal ArticleDOI

Antibody in the induction and inhibition of lymphocyte cytotoxicity.

TL;DR: In this chapter a cytotoxic mechanism which is known to act in a wide variety of situations will be described in detail and factors which act against mechanism will also be considered.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Techniques for the collection of lymph from the liver, small intestine, or thoracic duct of the rat.

TL;DR: The following techniques for collection of lymph in the rat have been very satisfactory for periods of two or three days for lymph from the liver and for periods up to ten days forymphatica from the intestine or from the thoracic duct.
Book ChapterDOI

Cytotoxic effects of lymphoid cells in vitro.

TL;DR: The study of the various pathways by which lymphoid cells can become cytotoxic has been helpful for the understanding of effector role of these cells in cell-destructive reactions in general.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cytotoxicity mediated by soluble antigen and lymphocytes in delayed hypersensitivity : iii. analysis of mechanism

TL;DR: The cytopathic effect of lymph node cells from tuberculin-sensitized rats on rat embryo fibroblasts in the presence of PPD was not enhanced by admixture of normal (nonsensitized) lymph nodes, and preincubation studies showed that this in vitro response is initiated by the reaction of lymphocytes with specific antigen.
Journal ArticleDOI

In vitro Cytotoxic Activity of Thymus Cells sensitized to Alloantigens

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that collaboration between thymus- derived cells and bone marrow-derived cells was essential for mice to respond to sheep red blood cells (SRBC) by producing haemolysin-forming cells.
Journal Article

Cellular antibodies in kidney homotransplantation

TL;DR: Sera from the recipient animals did not show any cytotoxic action on the cultures which, however, were highly sensitive to heterologous sera, which did not protect the cultures against the cytopathogenic effect of infectious canine hepatitis virus (ICHV).
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