Highly enriched preparations of monocytes, B and T lymphocytes, and granulocytes from 18 normal donors were serotyped in parallel in a complement-dependent cytotoxicity assay using allogeneic and heterologous antisera defining three independent tissue antigen systems. HLA and B-lymphocyte tissue antigens were detected on human monocytes although granulocyte antigens were absent. By cytotoxicity testing the presence of Ia-like antigens on monocytes was significantly diminished compared to the autologous B-lymphocyte population and has important implications in B-lymphocyte serology. The study indentified a number of human antisera obtained from multitransfused subjects and pre- and post-transplant organ recipients that were non-HLA and appeared to define monocyte-associated antigens. The serological implications of surface antigen expression on human monocytes compared with other peripheral blood cells are discussed.
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