Volume 13, Issue 7 pp. 581-584
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Internalized membrane immunoglobulin meets intracytoplasmic DR antigen in human B lymphoblastoid cells

Martin Pletscher

Corresponding Author

Martin Pletscher

Department of Microbiology, College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University, New York

Dermatologische Abteilung, Kantonsspital Basel, CH-4000 Basel, SwitzerlandSearch for more papers by this author
Benvenuto Pernis

Benvenuto Pernis

Department of Microbiology, College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University, New York

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First published: 1983
Citations: 17

Abstract

The important role of type II antigens of the major histocompatibility complex (Ia and DR) in the antigen presentation and in the antigen-specific cooperation between T and B cells is by now firmly established. Human B lymphoblastoid lines MWE and BL were stained with different fluoresceinated anti-DR antibodies. Not only surface but intracytoplasmic DR structures were brightly stained. The intracellular stain accumulated in a cluster close to the nucleus. Different specificity controls were performed. MWE and BL cells quickly internalize membrane IgM if cross-linked by corresponding antibodies. The intracellular location of the vesicles containing these complexes showed substantial coincidence with DR-positive structures in the paranuclear location. It is speculated that IgM-ligand complexes meet internal DR molecules and are both reexpressed on the plasma membrane to be recognized by primed T cells.

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