Antibody responses to the blood group antigen D in SCID mice reconstituted with human blood mononuclear cells.

1992 
Mice with severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) were reconstituted with peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) obtained from D-negative individuals who had been sensitized to D-positive erythrocytes. Anti-D was spontaneously secreted in mice reconstituted with PBMC obtained from donors within 14 days of re-immunization with D-positive erythrocytes, but was not detected in murine plasma when mice were reconstituted with PBMC obtained from the same donors many years after sensitization, even though anti-D was still present in the serum of these donors. In the murine plasma the anti-D titres were not related to the total human immunoglobulin concentrations. SCID mice reconstituted with PBMC from some donors immune to D-positive erythrocytes (but not immunized within 34 days of donating the sample) made a recall response to the D antigen, which in some cases was maintained for at least 84 days. Depletion of adherent cells from the reconstituting PBMC reduced the total concentration of human IgG obtained. These results show that SCID mice reconstituted with human PBMC (Hu PBMC-SCID) can make a recall response to the D antigen which cannot be attributed to non-specific polyclonal B-lymphocyte activation, and that efficient antigen processing and presentation of the integral erythrocyte membrane D polypeptide occurs in the Hu PBMC-SCID model.
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