1973
DOI: 10.1172/jci107194
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Combined Studies of Complement Receptor and Surface Immunoglobulin-Bearing Cells and Sheep Erythrocyte Rosette-Forming Cells in Normal and Leukemic Human Lymphocytes

Abstract: A B S T R A C T Human lymphocytes from normal peripheral blood, thymus, spleen, thoracic duct, and peripheral lymphocytes from patients with chronic lymphatic leukemia were studied for complement receptor sites (CRL), surface immunoglobulin (SIg), and for the ability to form rosettes with sheep erythrocytes (TRFC). The two B cell markers (CRL and SIg) were found to be in overlapping, but not totally identical populations, whereas cells that were able to form rosettes were found in a totally unrelated populatio… Show more

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Cited by 364 publications
(180 citation statements)
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“…There is ample evidence in mice that a substantial portion (up to 40 %) of Ig-bearing lymphocytes in spleen and lymph node lack detectable C receptors (24,25) and, as shown here, these cells appear before cells which bear C receptors. In human peripheral blood, it has also been reported that a substantial fraction of Ig + cells lack the C receptor (26), although the frequency of CRL does depend on (27). Thus, an Ig + CR-lymphocyte is well established, as of course is the Ig + CR + lymphocyte.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There is ample evidence in mice that a substantial portion (up to 40 %) of Ig-bearing lymphocytes in spleen and lymph node lack detectable C receptors (24,25) and, as shown here, these cells appear before cells which bear C receptors. In human peripheral blood, it has also been reported that a substantial fraction of Ig + cells lack the C receptor (26), although the frequency of CRL does depend on (27). Thus, an Ig + CR-lymphocyte is well established, as of course is the Ig + CR + lymphocyte.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In several reports on the classification of peripheral human lymphocytes as T and B cells, it has been stated that the percentage of' B cells having MBIg was higher than that of B cells having C3b receptors (24,30,31). In those studies, C3b receptors were demonstrated by the rosette technique.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…On the other hand, cultured cells may have lost surface receptors which were present on the cells from which they were derived. For example, it has been shown that three subclasses of B-type lymphocytes are present in the blood of patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia; cells having only MBIg, cells having only receptors for C3 and cells having both MBIg and receptors for C3 (24). In addition, in patients with X-linked agammaglobulinemia, lymphocytes without MBIg but with receptors for C3 have been described (25).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is difficult to assess which of these several differences between laboratories may account for the higher degree of B-cell specificity of the agg IgG receptor in the Bentwich et al study (2-4 % of T cells, as measured by their capacity to form rosettes with sheep erythrocytes, also bound agg-IgG) and the lack of such specificity in our study. The possibility that in peripheral blood the agg IgG receptor is primarily associated with B cells, whereas in the spleen it is not, is considered a real one since in a previous study on the occurrence of surface immunoglobulin and complement receptors (25), it was found that whereas in peripheral blood the complement receptor was found almost exclusively on SIg + cells, in the spleen there was a significant population of cells that were SIg-complement receptor positive.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%