The adoptive transfer of clinical and histopathologic signs of experimental allergic encephalomyelitis (EAE) requires MHC compatibility between cell donor and cell recipient. The results of adoptive transfer studies using F1 to parent bone marrow chimeras as recipients of parental-derived BP-sensitive spleen cells indicate that this restriction is not expressed at the level of the endothelial cell but is confined to the cells of bone marrow derivation. Furthermore, these results indicate that the development of EAE is not dependent on the activity of MHC-restricted cytotoxic cells.
Transfer of experimental allergic encephalomyelitis to bone marrow chimeras. Endothelial cells are not a restricting element
David J. Hinrichs,K. Wegmann,Gregory N. Dietsch
Published 1987 in Journal of Experimental Medicine
ABSTRACT
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- Publication year
1987
- Venue
Journal of Experimental Medicine
- Publication date
1987-12-01
- Fields of study
Biology, Medicine
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- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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