Cell Surface Modifications with Trifluoromethyl Dinitrophenyl-Soluble Protein Conjugates: Immunogenic Role of Noncovalently Bound Hapten

1984 ◽  
Vol 75 (1) ◽  
pp. 20-26 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Bischoff ◽  
M. Maugras ◽  
S. Poignant ◽  
D. Oth
1979 ◽  
Vol 27 (8) ◽  
pp. 1174-1176 ◽  
Author(s):  
P P De Bruyn

Changes in the anionic charge distribution at the luminal face of the endothelium of the sinusoids of the bone marrow have been studied at sites of endocytosis by large bristle coated vesicles and at the sites of molecular permeability through diaphragmed fenestrae. The anionic charge distribution has also been studied at the abluminal aspect of these vessels at sites of transmural blood cell passage. Cationic surface markers such as colloidal iron, native ferritin and polycationic ferritin used at low pH, 1.8, and the use of neuraminidase show that the nonmodified endothelial cell surface has exposed sialic acid groups, which are absent at the sites of these functional specializations. Polycationic ferritin binding over a range of pH levels indicates the prsence of another species of anionic materials present at both the nonmodified cell surface and at the sites of the cell surface modifications. This second group of anionic compounds is neuraminidase resistant and has a pKa higher than that of sialic acid (pKa:2.6).


1973 ◽  
Vol 137 (4) ◽  
pp. 967-990 ◽  
Author(s):  
David H. Katz ◽  
Emil R. Unanue

A detailed analysis of the role of determinant presentation in the process of triggering immunocompetent lymphocytes has been made utilizing cell-bound hapten-carrier conjugates to elicit secondary antihapten antibody responses, primarily in vitro. The results of these experiments demonstrate that: (a) hapten-protein conjugates will attach to the surface membranes of macrophages directly, in the absence of specific antibodies, in a highly immunogenic form; (b) such macrophage-bound conjugates serve as remarkedly efficient stimuli to trigger both thymus-derived (T) and bone marrow-derived (B) cells in a specific manner, lowering the optimal threshold antigen dose (in molar terms) by several logs as compared with soluble antigen; (c) the macrophage is not unique in this regard, since fibroblasts are essentially comparable in the capacity to present antigen in highly immunogenic form; (d) cell surface-bound antigen clearly favors secondary in vitro responses of the IgG as compared with the IgM antibody class; (e) in terms of triggering B or T cells, antigen bound to macrophages in the form of immune complexes does not appear to possess any appreciable advantage over equimolar quantities of directly attached antigen; (f) the increased immunogenicity of cell-bound antigen appears to reflect certain crucial, and undefined, features of cell surface membranes and not merely the stabilization of determinants on a relatively immobile surface; and (g) although the efficiency of lymphocyte triggering is markedly enhanced by cell-bound antigen, the presence of macrophages is apparently not an absolute requirement for eliciting secondary in vitro antibody responses to soluble hapten-protein conjugates. The relevance of these observations to the nature of the signal induced upon antigen interaction by specific lymphocytes and the sequential cellular events involved in the regulatory influence of activated T cells on B cell responses to antigen is discussed. We postulate that T lymphocytes are best triggered by cell-bound antigen and that after this step the activated T lymphocytes regulate the triggering of B cells with antigen.


1991 ◽  
Vol 30 (06) ◽  
pp. 290-293 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Maleki ◽  
A. Martinezi ◽  
M. C. Crone-Escanye ◽  
J. Robert ◽  
L. J. Anghileri

The study of the interaction between complexed iron and tumor cells in the presence of 67Ga-citrate indicates that a phenomenon of iron-binding related to the thermodynamic constant of stability of the iron complex, and a hydrolysis (or anion penetration) of the interaction product determine the uptake of 67Ga. The effects of various parameters such as ionic composition of the medium, nature of the iron complex, time of incubation and number of cells are discussed.


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