Abstract

NZB mice which were already producing anti-erythrocyte autoantibodies were not able to respond to their own liver F antigen, thus providing evidence that their autoimmunity is not caused by a generalized breakdown in self-tolerance mechanisms. The specificity of autoantibodies produced in the spontaneous hemolytic anemia was different from that of antierythrocyte antibodies induced in normal mice and in young NZB mice by injections of rat erythrocytes. This indicates that the B-cell clones which can be triggered by heterologous antigen are different from those responsible for the NZB disease; the latter clones may not exist in normal mice.

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