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XB-ART-31141
Eur J Immunol 1981 Feb 01;112:151-5.
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Genetic control of T helper cell function in the clawed toad Xenopus laevis.

Bernard CC , Bordmann G , Blomberg B , Du Pasquier L .


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The genetic control of the collaboration between Xenopus T and B cells has been analyzed in vivo using cells from five strains of major histocompatibility complex-defined Xenopus. When carrier (fowl gamma-globulin)-primed T cells and hapten (dinitrophenylated keyhole limpet hemocyanin)-primed B cells differed by minor histocompatibility antigens or by only one haplotype of the major histocompatibility complex, the collaboration was efficient in the sense that large numbers of plaques, low-molecular weight antibodies and high-affinity IgM antibodies could be recorded in the cultures challenged with dinitrophenylated fowl gamma-globulin. However, when T and B cells differed at both alleles of the major histocompatibility complex, lower numbers of plaques were obtained, no low-molecular weight anti-hapten antibodies could be detected, and the IgM antibodies that were sometimes synthesized were of low affinity. This suggests that the major histocompatibility complex, or a gene linked with it, affects the collaboration between Xenopus T and B cells in a way perhaps similar to that described in mammals.

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Species referenced: Xenopus laevis
Genes referenced: ighx