The in vitro production of anti-DNA antibody by cultured peripheral blood or tonsillar lymphoid cells from normal donors and SLE patients.

  • Cairns E
  • St Germain J
  • Bell D
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Abstract

Anti-DNA antibody responses by cultured circulating lymphocytes from SLE patients and by the tonsillar lymphoid cells of normal donors were detected and enumerated by a sensitive specific ELISA of culture supernatants, or by a hemolytic anti-DNA PFC assay. Although spontaneous IgM and IgG anti-DNA and anti-ssDNA responses were characteristic of SLE lymphocytes and spontaneous IgM anti-ssDNA responses were characteristic of tonsillar lymphocytes, the circulating lymphocytes of normal controls never produced anti-DNA antibodies spontaneously, and rarely after PWM stimulation. The anti-DNA antibody PFC response of tonsil lymphocytes correlated directly with the total number of immunoglobulin-producing cells measured by a reverse hemolytic PFC assay. Mixing experiments in which we employed cultures of comparable numbers of separately enriched autologous circulating and tonsillar B and T cells revealed that tonsillar tissue contained an enriched population of anti-DNA antibody precursor B cells and/or helper T cells.

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Cairns, E., St Germain, J., & Bell, D. A. (1985). The in vitro production of anti-DNA antibody by cultured peripheral blood or tonsillar lymphoid cells from normal donors and SLE patients. The Journal of Immunology, 135(6), 3839–3844. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.135.6.3839

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