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Usage Information

Identification of human and rodent thymic epithelium using tetanus toxin and monoclonal antibody A2B5.
B F Haynes, K Shimizu, G S Eisenbarth
B F Haynes, K Shimizu, G S Eisenbarth
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Research Article

Identification of human and rodent thymic epithelium using tetanus toxin and monoclonal antibody A2B5.

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Abstract

Using a monoclonal antibody (A2B5), which binds to GQ ganglioside, and tetanus toxin, which binds to GD and GT gangliosides, distinct regions of human and rodent thymic epithelial cells have been identified. The lymphoid elements of the thymus do not bind A2B5 or tetanus toxin. The A2B5 and tetanus toxin-binding cells form a network of thymic epithelial cells throughout the thymic subcapsular cortex and thymic medulla and contain thymopoietin and thymosin alpha-1.

Authors

B F Haynes, K Shimizu, G S Eisenbarth

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Usage data is cumulative from June 2025 through June 2026.

Usage JCI PMC
Text version 252 6
PDF 89 6
Figure 0 4
Scanned page 425 0
Citation downloads 135 0
Totals 901 16
Total Views 917
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ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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