Leucocyte Typing V SetWhite Cell Differentiation AntigensTwo Volume Set |
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Editor:
| Schlossman, Stuart F. Boumsell, Laurence Gilks, Wally Harlan, John M. Kishimoto, Tadamitsu Morimoto, Chikao Ritz, Jerome Shaw, Stephen Silverstein, Roy Springer, Timothy Tedder, Thomas F. Todd, Robert F. |
ISBN: | 978-0-19-262376-8 |
Publication Date: | Aug 1995 |
Publisher: | Oxford University Press, Incorporated
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Book Format: | Hardback |
List Price: | AUD $750.00 |
Book Description:
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This book describes the state of the art of monoclonal antibodies that react with molecules on the surface of human leucocytes, platelets, or enothelial cells, and will be a key source of information describing the present state of our knowledge of human leucocyte differentation antigens. The fifth International Workshop and Conference on Human Leucocyte Differentiation Antigens was held in Boston on November 3-7, 1993. Those present at the meeting represented the efforts of more than...
More DescriptionThis book describes the state of the art of monoclonal antibodies that react with molecules on the surface of human leucocytes, platelets, or enothelial cells, and will be a key source of information describing the present state of our knowledge of human leucocyte differentation antigens. The fifth International Workshop and Conference on Human Leucocyte Differentiation Antigens was held in Boston on November 3-7, 1993. Those present at the meeting represented the efforts of more than 500 laboratories worldwide who joined together over a two year period to analyse 1450 antibodies and characterize over 150 molecules. Blind panels for all monoclonal antibodies including every CD, every noncandidate for CD status and all monoclonals of undefined specificity were analysed by flow cytometry. Other dedicated laboratories undertook serologic molecular, biochemical, histochemical characterization of the monoclonal antibodies and structures they defined. The results obtained in Boston are detailed in this two volume set. Special emphasis is given in the book to the description and characterization of 48 new CD clusters and subclusters and the redefinition of 14 previously defined established clusters.