A product of antigenic recognition (PAR) was produced whenever receptors for alloantigens from T lymphocytes or a principle present in T-cell dependent alloantisera interacted with alloantigen. With two forms of the PAR assay (direct and indirect) the mechanisms underlying these interactions have been analyzed. For the interaction of T-lymphocyte receptors with alloantigen measured with direct PAR assays, the following conclusion emerged: upon confrontation with alloantigen, receptors (if not already present in secreted form) had first to be released from T-cell membranes. Shed T-cell receptors interacted with alloantigens by solubilizing them. Both processes could be prevented by fixing cells with formaldehyde. Release of T-cell receptors was temperature-dependent, solubilization of alloantigens was not. Because in mixed cell cultures receptors had first to be shed, this process was considerably slower and, in concordance with temperature dependence of receptor release, took place only at 37 °C. Titration of T lymphocytes with ‘bound’ receptors by the direct PAR test revealed that in the presence of excess alloantigen 102 T cells sufficed to give measurable responses. Supernates of parental strain lymphocytes containing numerous T-cell receptor specificities could be depleted of one of them. Alloantisera raised in presence of T helper cells (‘T alloantisera’) contained a principle capable of recognizing alloantigens, alloantisera incited in the absence of T helpers (‘B alloantisera’) did not. The recognizing principle appeared to be IgG. Like T-cell receptors, it was capable of solubilizing alloantigens form target cell membranes. B alloantisera lacked this capacity and their alloantigen-recognizing moiety was found to be monomeric IgM. The mode of interaction of this IgM with alloantigen most likely consisted in fixation to and shielding of antigen.
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