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Alloimmune reactions among recently wild syrian hamsters and classical inbred strains include alloantibody production

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Abstract

Partially inbred lines of Syrian hamsters, the descendants of animals caught wild in Syria within the past decade, have been studied to determine their immunogenetic relationships to the long established domestic inbred strains. These new sources of hamster genes display strong alloimmune reactions when confronted with tissues from the domestic inbred strains and vice versa: acute skin graft rejection, strong mixed lymphocyte reactions, and intense graft-versus-host reactions. While these forms of reactivity have also characterized the disparities among the domestic inbred strains, no evidence of alloantibodies specific for putative transplantation antigens has ever been found in hamsters. We report, for the first time, that immunization of recently wild hamsters with tissues from domestic inbred strain donors elicits high titer cytotoxic antibodies directed at alloantigens. Similarly, animals of the domestic inbred strains produce comparably strong alloantibody responses when immunized with tissues from the recently wild hamsters. Availability of these alloantisera will make the possibility of defining the major histocompatibility complex equivalent in this species much more likely.

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Streilein, J.W., Duncan, W.R. Alloimmune reactions among recently wild syrian hamsters and classical inbred strains include alloantibody production. Immunogenetics 9, 563–573 (1979). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01570450

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