Five human lymphoblastoid cell lines have been investigated for their ability to secrete immunoglobulins (IgG, IgA, IgM) and for the presence of different cell surface markers, with special emphasis on the F c IgM receptor, using a rosette technique with IgM-coated bovine red blood cells (EA-IgM).
Synthesis of complement component C5 by human B and T lymphoblastoid cell lines
โ Scribed by William Reed; Robert A. S. Roubey; Juanita G. Dalzell; Barbara M. Matteucci; Barry L. Myones; Stephen W. Hunt; William P. Kolb; Gordon D. Ross
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag
- Year
- 1990
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 794 KB
- Volume
- 31
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0093-7711
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โฆ Synopsis
Human B and T lymphoblastoid cell lines were shown to synthesize C5. C5 synthesis was quantitated with an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) that utilized a pool of C5-specific monoclonal antibodies (mAbs). Some level of C5 synthesis was detected in all eight of the B and T cell lines examined. In three of the cell lines, C5 was detected in both culture supernatants and whole cell detergent lysates, whereas in the other five cell lines, C5 was detected only in the cell lysates. Lymphoblastoid cells with both distributions of C5 were shown to synthesize a messenger RNA that was similar in size to the C5 mRNA expressed by the HepG2 hepatoma cell line. Estimates of the concentration of the C5 transcript in poly(A)+ RNA from lymphoblastoid and HepG2 cells suggested that C5 mRNA levels in the lymphoblastoid cell lines were comparable and about one-tenth of the levels in HepG2 cells. Lymphoblastoid C5, isolated by immunoaffinity chromatography from the supernatants of 35S-labeled cultures, had the same subunit composition as plasma-derived C5, but had an alpha subunit of slightly smaller relative mass.
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## Abstract A number of tissue culture cell lines were tested for synthesis of C1, C2 and C4. Supernates from two human embryo cell lines were positive for C1 when received, but on further culturing gave only slight amounts of C1. A number of cell lines produced C2 over a long period. This producti