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  • Book
    [by] K. Mohan Iyer.
    Digital Access Springer 2012
  • Article
    Watson J.
    J Immunol. 1977 Mar;118(3):1103-8.
    The lipid A moiety of bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) elicits several types of responses in murine B lymphocytes. First, lipid A induces the nonproliferative expression of cell surface antigens in more immature cell types. Second, lipid A induces a mitogenic response in more mature B cell types. Lipid A induces the expression of Ia antigens on bone marrow cells from C3H/DiSn but not C3H/HeJ mice. The Ia-inducible cells possess surface immunoglobulin. Agents that elevate intracellular levels of adenosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate (cyclic AMP) induce the appearance of Ia antigens on B lymphocytes from both C3H/HeJ and C3H/DiSn mice, suggesting that lipid A exerts its inductive effects by increasing cyclic AMP levels in cells. In contrast to what is observed by using other strains of mice, mature B lymphocytes from C3H/HeJ mice do not support a mitogenic response to lipid A. The subpopulation of B lymphocytes in C3H/HeJ mice that normally respond mitogenically to LPS not only appear to lack an LPS-response mechanism utilized in the mitogenic pathway, but they lack the LPS-response pathway of the immature B cell types. A lipid A-bound protein (LAP) induces both the expression of Ia and a mitogenic response in the different subpopulations of B lymphocytes from C3H/HeJ and C3H/DiSn mice. The genetic defect in C3H/HeJ mice that limits responses to lipid A may be associated with a receptor that is normally expressed on many different cell types.
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