When used for pretransplantation treatment, blood of congenic chicken lines CB and CB.R1, incompatible only in the B-G region of the major histocompatibility complex (MHC), differed in their ability to induce prolonged survival of skin grafts transferred from either of these lines onto recipients of a third congenic line, CC. Moreover, skin grafts from CB and CB.R1 donors displayed a difference in survival time, irrespective of blood pretreatment. Graft survival time after pretreatment of recipients with CB blood could be prolonged by prior induction of neonatal tolerance to the B-G product; this could be done with injections of whole blood or of separated erythrocytes or leucocytes of line CC.R1 chickens (incompatible with CC recipients in the B-G region). The results indicate that a new histocompatibility locus is present in the B-G region of the chicken MHC.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1399-0039.1987.tb01556.x | DOI Listing |
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