Abstract
The relative importance of the B and IR regions of the chicken B complex were compared as to their role in the graft-versus-host (GVH) reaction. Spleen enlargement (splenomegaly) on 19-day-old embryos, inoculated 5 days earlier with immune competent leukocytes, served as the test for the GVH reaction. The B blood group locus was the marker of the “B” region, and the Ir-GAT gene was the marker of the immune response (Ir) region of the B complex, the major histocompatibility system (MHS) of chickens. The test stocks consisted of B1B1 GAT-Low (1-Low) and B19B19 Gat-High (19-High) birds of our S1 Leghorn line plus the recombinant genotypes B1B1 Gat-High (1-High) and B19B19 GAT-low (19-Low). A dosage of 0.1 ml of donor white blood cells was injected into each of 191 recipient embryos on day 14, and the spleens were removed and weighed on day 19. Of 16 combinations of (donor blood)-(host embryos), arranged with respect to the four genotypes listed above, four were compatible, e. g., (1-Low)-(1-Low). There were four incompatible combinations at the B locus, four at the GAT locus, and four at both the B and GAT loci. All 16 combinations were replicated. Results were expressed as a splenomegaly index (SI), that is, the ratio of incompatible to compatible spleen weights corrected for differences in embryo weight. If (SI-1) is greater than 0, the GVH reaction is considered positive within sampling errors. The mean (SI-1) indexes obtained were: incompatible at GAT-0.5±0.07; incompatible at B-1.34±0.10. Thus, both GAT and B contributed to the GVH reaction, but the B region was much stronger than the IR region. The results were strongly asymmetrical: maximal stimulation occurred when the host embryo was B19B19 GAT-high and donor leukocytes were B1B1 GAT-Low. The parental donor-host paired combinations gave stronger GVH reactions than did the recombinant pairs. Effects of incompatibilities at the two regions proved additive when compared with two-locus differences of parental genotypes. In general, the results proved that the IR region, as specifically defined by recombinants obtained in our S1 line of Leghorns, plays a significant, but minor, role in the GVH reaction compared with the region of the B complex identified with the B blood-group locus.
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