Blood, 1959, Vol. 14, No. 10, pp. 1079-1093.
© 1959 American Society of Hematology, Inc.
Acquired Hemolytic Anemia with Polyagglutinability of
Red Blood Cells Due to a New Factor Present in
Normal Human Serum (Anti-Tn)
JEAN DAUSSET 1,
JEAN MOULLEC 1, and
JEAN BERNARD 1
1 Centre National de Transfusion Sanguine, Paris, and the Centre de Recherches
sur les Maladies du Sang de l’Association Claude Bernard, Hôpital Saint-Louis, Paris.
A case of acquired hemolytic anemia of 12 years duration showing a permanent polyagglutinability for at least 9 years, is presented.
1. Polyagglutinability is due to the presence on the surface of the patients
erythrocytes of an antigen unknown up to the present time, which is independent of antigens T and H and does not behave like a normal
antigen modified by proteolytic enzymes. It has been designated by the
letters Tn. The Tn substance is not secreted in saliva. This antigen has not
been found on the erythrocytes of 25 members of the patients family.
2. The substance which induces agglutination (natural anti-Tn) was found
to be present in the serum of 473 white adults and 33 adult Negroes. It
was absent or weak in 28 sera from cords blood. It acts like a complete
antibody, being active in saline at the temperature of laboratory and then
inducing massive clumping of Tn red cells. Through absorption and elution
studies and through sensitization in rabbits, we have been able to demonstrate that anti-T and anti-Tn are distinct.
3. There are in our patients serum: (a) a substance specifically active
against Tn erythrocytes treated by trypsin; this may be an immune anti-Tn; (b) a nonspecific incomplete antibody weaker than the anti-Tn and
active against all varieties of red cells treated by trypsin; (c) an incomplete
anti-E; (d) a cold antiplatelet substance; and (e) an immune antileukocyte
antibody.
These three last antibodies are very probably due to transfusions.
4. To explain the combination of an acquired hemolytic anemia and polyagglutinability, two hypotheses are presented: (a) The acquired hemolytic
anemia has no relationship to the existence in the patient of a very rare
group antigen, perhaps confined to one family. (b) The hemolytic anemia
is directly related to the existence of the Tn antigen on our patients red cells
and is due to the development of an immune anti-Tn antibody against the
Tn antigen, this last antigen being either a group antigen or an antigen
revealed or modified by the causal agent of the disease.
Submitted on June 18, 1958
Accepted on April 27, 1959