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1 Medical Service of the Veterans Administration Hospital and the Department
of Medicine, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, Wash.
The anti-D antibody of two human sera was found to be transferred in
part from sensitized group A Rh (D)-positive cells to normal group B Rh (D)-positive cells when the cell suspensions were mixed and incubated in a saline
medium. The amount of anti-D antibody transferred from sensitized to normal cells
in a given period of time was found to be directly related to the concentration
of antibody to which the group A donor cells were originally exposed. It is
concluded that the amount of antibody transferred to recipient cells under
standard conditions is related to the concentration of antibody on the surface
of the donor cells.
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