Publication | Open Access
The immunological specificity of a macrophage inhibition factor.
76
Citations
11
References
1970
Year
Normal MacrophagesImmune RegulationImmunologyAntigen ProcessingInnate ImmunityImmune SystemInflammationMacrophage Inhibition FactorMacrophage BiologyNormal Macrophage MigrationMacrophage GlueImmunoengineeringHumoral ImmunityImmune FunctionCell BiologyPhagocyteMolecular ImmunologyImmunosuppressionMedicine
A system is described by which antigen-free supernatants can be obtained from cultures of specifically sensitized lymph node cells and antigen. By its use it has been possible to demonstrate that antigen (PPD or β-lactoglobulin) is needed for the inhibition of normal macrophage migration by cell free supernatants from the lymph node cultures. It, therefore, seems likely that the macrophage inhibition factor (MIF) detected in this system was not a non-specific `macrophage glue' but an `antibody-like' factor immobilizing normal macrophages in the presence of antigen.
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