Publication | Open Access
Secretory component of epithelial cells is a surface receptor for polymeric immunoglobulins.
178
Citations
18
References
1978
Year
Secretory ComponentProtein SecretionAutoimmune DiseaseAllergyImmunoglobulin BindingImmunologyImmune RegulationAntigen ProcessingAutoimmunitySurface ReceptorPolymeric ImmunoglobulinImmunoglobulin EImmunotherapyMedicineCell BiologyCellular PhysiologyEpithelial CellsSecretory Pathway
Epithelial cells of human fetal intestines and of a colonic carcinoma cell line (HT-29) exhibited intracellular and surface binding of polymeric immunoglobulins of IgA and IgM classes; monomeric IgA and IgG did not bind to these cells. Secretory component was identified as the receptor involved in the immunoglobulin binding. This conclusion was confirmed by the following experiments: trypsin abrogated the surface binding of polymeric immunoglobulin, reappearance of surface secretory component (SC) restored immunoglobulin binding; the appearance of SC in developing fetal tissues coincided with their potential to bind polymeric immunoglobulin; anti-SC reagents inhibited the binding of immunoglobulins to epithelial cells; and SC-containing secretory IgA did not bind to the surface of HT-29 cells.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1