Abstract
Summary
An immunosuppressive antilymphocyte serum prolonged the survival of skin allografts and suppressed the systemic graft-versus-host reactivity of lymph node cells from treated mice. Those same lymph node cells, however, were highly reactive when tested in the skin of the X-irradiated hamster, and that reactivity was dependent, at least in part, upon the presence of viable, histoin-compatible cell populations. We conclude that cells from the ALS-treated mice react well in that local assay while showing suppressed reactivity in the systemic assays of immunocompetence.
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