Chicken major histocompatibility complex-encoded B-G antigens are found on many cell types that are important for the immune system

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Abstract

B-G antigens are a polymorphic multigene family of cell surface molecules encoded by the chicken major histocompatibility complex (MHC). They have previously been described only on cells of the erythroid lineage. By using flow cytometry, section staining, and immunoprecipitation with monoclonal antibodies and rabbit antisera to B-G molecules and by using Northern blots with B-G cDNA clones, we demonstrate here that B-G molecules and RNA are present in many other cell types: thrombocytes, peripheral B and T lymphocytes, bursal B cells and thymocytes, and stromal cells in the bursa, thymus, and caecal tonsil of the intestine. The reactions also identify at least one polymorphic B-G determinant encoded by the B-F/B-L region of the chicken MHC. The serology and tissue distribution of B-G molecules are as complex as those of mammalian MHC class I and class II molecules. These facts, taken with certain functional data, lead us to suggest that B-G molecules have an important role in the selection of B cells in the chicken bursa.

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Salomonsen, J., Dunon, D., Skjødt, K., Thorpe, D., Vainio, O., & Kaufman, J. (1991). Chicken major histocompatibility complex-encoded B-G antigens are found on many cell types that are important for the immune system. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 88(4), 1359–1363. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.88.4.1359

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