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. 1972 Oct 31;136(5):1222–1230. doi: 10.1084/jem.136.5.1222

ASSOCIATION OF H-2 TYPES WITH GENETIC CONTROL OF IMMUNE RESPONSIVENESS TO IGG (γ2a) ALLOTYPES IN THE MOUSE

Rose Lieberman 1, William Humphrey Jr 1
PMCID: PMC2139298  PMID: 4117189

Abstract

Immune responsiveness to IgG allotypes in the mouse was found to be controlled by an immune response gene Ir-IgG linked to the H-2 locus. This was demonstrated by the analysis of the immune response to BALB/c IgG (γ2a) myeloma proteins in mice of various H-2 types from five different linkage groups of immunoglobulin heavy chains. Antisera were examined for antibodies to idiotypic (Fab) and allotypic (Fc) specificities. No immune response to BALB/c IgG myeloma proteins was found in mice with the same heavy-chain immunoglobulin linkage group as BALB/c but of different H-2 types. In mice with immunoglobulin heavy chains that are different than BALB/c, a high immune response to IgG myeloma proteins was found in H-2 types b, bc, p, r, s, and v; a low response in a, d, k, and q. The Ir-IgG gene is controlled by a dominant autosomal gene.

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

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