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The Journal of Immunology, Vol 132, Issue 2 640-643, Copyright © 1984 by American Association of Immunologists
ARTICLES |
A Lowy, PM Flood, A Tominaga, JA Drebin, J Dambrauskas, RK Gershon and MI Greene
We have analyzed the first-order suppressor factor secreted by an azobenzenearsonate (ABA)-specific T suppressor cell (Ts) hybridoma. Treatment of the factor with 5 mM dithiothreitol (DTT) yields two fragments with distinct phenotypes and functional capabilities. One fragment is bound by a monoclonal anti-I-J antibody, the other is not. Further, although neither molecular fragment by itself is sufficient to suppress an ABA response, a mixture of the two reconstitutes the suppressive activity. The I-J- portion of the first-order suppressor factor (TsF1) presumably guides the antigen specificity; activity of the ABA-specific Ts I-J- TsF1 factor can be reconstituted with an I-J+ subunit of a TsF molecule of either sheep red blood cell (SRBC) or ABA specificity. The genetic restriction for Igh-linked determinants of the ABA/SRBC hybrid TsF molecules is influenced by the I-J+ portion, regardless of the original antigen specificity of that molecule. The data support a two-subunit TsF model. Polyclonal ABA-specific TsF1 molecules appear to resemble the monoclonal factor in structure.
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