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Studies on the control of antibody synthesis. XVI. Effect of immunodepression on antibody affinity
Authors:R H DeKruyff  G W Siskind
Institution:Division of Allergy and Immunology, Department of Medicine, Cornell University Medical College, New York, New York 10021 USA
Abstract:The relationship between depression in the magnitude of the immune response and a decrease in affinity of the antibody produced was examined in three different models of immuno-depression (B-cell clonal deletion tolerance, specific suppressor T-cell activity, and anti-genie competition). In B-cell clonal deletion tolerance and in antigen-specific, suppressor T-cell-mediated immunodepression, a small decrease in magnitude (50% or less) is associated with a marked decrease in high-affinity, plaque-forming cells. In contrast, with nonspecific immunodepression, due to antigenic competition, a depression in affinity is only seen when there is a marked (85%) reduction in the magnitude of the response. The results are consistent with the view that when the mechanism of immunodepression involves interaction of antigen with antigen-specific B cells there is a disproportionate loss of high-affinity, antibody-producing cells relative to the decrease in magnitude. In contrast, with nonspecific immuno-depression, where the decrease in affinity is presumably due to inefficient expansion of high-affinity clones, an effect on affinity is only observed in association with a marked depression in the magnitude of the response.
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