IMMUNE CELL COOPERATION, VIRUSES, AND ANTIBODIES TO NUCLEIC ACIDS IN NEW ZEALAND MICE
The development of autoimmunity in New Zealand mice is related to genetic, immunologic, and viral factors. Evidence is presented to suggest that thymus-dependent immune functions may be depressed and bone marrow-dependent functions augmented in these mice. Antibodies to RNA and DNA appear spontaneo...
Main Authors: | Talal, Norman, Steinberg, Alfred D., Jacobs, Michael E., Chused, Thomas M., Gazdar, Adi F. |
---|---|
Format: | Online |
Language: | English |
Published: |
The Rockefeller University Press
1971
|
Online Access: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2139098/ |
Similar Items
-
INDUCTION OF IMMUNOLOGIC TOLERANCE IN OLDER NEW ZEALAND MICE REPOPULATED WITH YOUNG SPLEEN, BONE MARROW, OR THYMUS
by: Staples, Parker J., et al.
Published: (1970) -
Immune Activation in the Liver by Nucleic Acids
by: Sun, Qian, et al.
Published: (2016) -
THE NUCLEIC ACID AND CARBOHYDRATE OF INFLUENZA VIRUS
by: Knight, C. A.
Published: (1947) -
THE NUCLEIC ACIDS OF SOME INSECT VIRUSES
by: Wyatt, G. R.
Published: (1952) -
NUCLEIC ACIDS AND THE PRODUCTION OF ANTIBODY BY PLASMA CELLS
by: Ehrich, William E., et al.
Published: (1949)