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      Intraembryonic origin of lymphoid stem cells in the chicken: studies with sex chromosome and IgG allotype markers in histocompatible yolk sac-embryo chimaeras.

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          Abstract

          Two-day-old chick embryonic bodies were transplanted onto the area vasculosa of age-matched histocompatible blastoderms, resulting in the development of yolk sac-embryo chimaeras. Eighteen of these succeeded in hatching and became adults. Differences in the sex chromosomes and in IgG allotype between the embryo and the yolk sac were used to study the contribution of these two components to the lymphoid cell development. At 5-7 weeks of age the chimaeras proved to be completely normal in the IgM and IgG antibody production against human gamma globulin and Brucella abortus and in the lymphocyte responses to phytohaemagglutinin and concanavalin A. For the sex chromosome analyses bursa cells and specifically stimulated B and T lymphocytes were used. The latter was achieved by stimulating thymus, spleen, and bone marrow cells in vitro with anti-Ig and Con A. Only four out of 1498 mitoses analysed belonged to the sex opposite to that of the bird. Among the chimaeras eleven were marked through IgG allotypes. At the age of 3-20 weeks all eleven chimaeras showed serum IgG of the embryo allotype and none of the yolk sac type. These results, based on the use of two different markers, indicate that lymphoid stem cells in the chicken are originally derived from an intraembryonic source and not from the yolk sac.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Scand. J. Immunol.
          Scandinavian journal of immunology
          0300-9475
          0300-9475
          1979
          : 10
          : 4
          Article
          316918
          445ec154-59df-4214-b47c-37187ec86e90
          History

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