Two monoclonal antibodies were obtained that showed unique specificities for the leukemic T cells used for immunization. One antibody, S160, was totally specific for the antigen. The other antibody, S511, also reacted with a small population of normal T cells. This was made especially evident by concentrating these normal T cells with the antibody. Considerable evidence was obtained that both antibodies reacted with the same membrane molecules. In the unreduced state a major component of approximately 80 kdaltons was observed; after reduction this split into two components of approximately 43 and approximately 38 kdaltons. The reaction of the two antibodies with different antigenic sites on the same molecule, one representing a private site and the other a more cross-reactive site, strongly suggests an antibodylike molecule, but composed of polypeptide chains differing from immunoglobulins.
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1 September 1983
Article|
September 01 1983
Idiotype-like molecules on cells of a human T cell leukemia.
R D Bigler
D E Fisher
C Y Wang
E A Rinnooy Kan
H G Kunkel
Online ISSN: 1540-9538
Print ISSN: 0022-1007
J Exp Med (1983) 158 (3): 1000–1005.
Citation
R D Bigler, D E Fisher, C Y Wang, E A Rinnooy Kan, H G Kunkel; Idiotype-like molecules on cells of a human T cell leukemia.. J Exp Med 1 September 1983; 158 (3): 1000–1005. doi: https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.158.3.1000
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