Induction of a T-cell specific antigen on bone marrow lymphocytes with thymus RNA
- PMID: 75176
- PMCID: PMC1457351
Induction of a T-cell specific antigen on bone marrow lymphocytes with thymus RNA
Abstract
Expression of a rabbit T-cell specific antigen can be induced on bone marrow lymphocytes following exposure to an RNA extract obtained from the thymuses of young rabbits. The presence of the antigen was demonstrated using goat anti-rabbit T-cell serum in a complement-dependent cytotoxicity assay. The T-cell antigen first appeared 3 h after addition of the thymus RNA to bone marrow cell cultures and the maximum number of cells expressing the T-cell antigen was observed within 24 h. RNA obtained from a source other than the thymus was found to be ineffective in inducing expression of the T-cell antigen. The induction of the antigen appears to be dependent on the presence of intact thymus RNA, as RNase treatment but not trypsin treatment, destroyed the ability of the RNA to induce the T-cell antigen.
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