Determinant selection is a macrophage dependent immune response gene function
- PMID: 16073428
- DOI: 10.1038/267156a0
Determinant selection is a macrophage dependent immune response gene function
Abstract
Immune response (Ir) genes are linked to the species histocompatibility complex and define as yet uncharacterised phenotypic products which control the immune response to thymus dependent antigens. Antibody formation and antigen induced T lymphocyte proliferation are two examples of immune phenomena which, in vivo and in vitro, operate under Ir gene influence. To clarify their mechanism of action and cellular location, we have examined the contribution of antigen structure (amino acid sequence and conformation to Ir gene control of antigen recognition by T lymphocytes) as well as to the critical role played by the antigen presenting macrophage in expression of that control. We report that immune response gene control of antigen recognition operates at least in part at the level of the macrophage.
Comment in
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Are the Ir genes expressed by macrophages?Nature. 1977 May 12;267(5607):105. doi: 10.1038/267105a0. Nature. 1977. PMID: 16073400 No abstract available.
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