Production of autoantibodies by human-human hybridomas.

Yehuda Shoenfeld(Tufts Medical Center), S C Hsu-Lin(Tufts Medical Center), Joseph Gabriels(Tufts Medical Center), Leslie E. Silberstein(Tufts University), Bruce Furie(Tufts University), B Furie(Tufts Medical Center), B. David Stollar(Tufts University), Robert S. Schwartz(Tufts University)
Journal of Clinical Investigation
July 1, 1982
Cited by 226Open Access
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Abstract

Peripheral blood lymphocytes and splenocytes of patients with autoimmune disease were used to prepare human-human hybridomas that produce autoantibodies. Because exogenous immunization was not used, the hybridoma antibodies were derived from B cells that spontaneously produced autoantibodies. 108 hybrids grew from 4,254 wells (2.5%). Optimal conditions for obtaining hybridomas with the GM 4672 myeloma line included initial growth in 2-ml wells, the use of 44% polyethylene glycol, a mononuclear cell/GM 4672 cell ratio 5:1, and prior stimulation of the B lymphocytes with pokeweed mitogen. Hybridoma supernatants had activity against ssDNA, platelets, and erythrocytes. The results demonstrate the feasibility of producing human-human hybridomas from lymphocytes of patients with various autoimmune diseases.


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