
Immunology
Robert A. Good, MD
JAMA. 1981;245(21):2197-2198.
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To attempt to describe major advances in immunology in 1980 in a few words is to admit bias and forge ahead. Immunology is a surging fundamental discipline closely interactive with the clinic, and it is to be expected that fundamental advances will be quickly translated into improved understanding and treatment of disease.
Perhaps the most important advance during 1980 has been the great strides toward understanding the "miracle" of immunology. This is the miracle that has been described by Sir Peter Medawar in the following terms: "It is important to remember that a rabbit yet unborn will be able to make antibody to an antigen not yet synthesized."
Second, we have seen the harnessing of the new hybridoma technology for producing monoclonal antibodies to permit definition of human T-cell subpopulations. This same technology has permitted beginning analyses of cell-cell interactions and cellular differentiation in molecular terms, improved understanding of a
. . . [Full Text PDF of this Article]
Author Affiliations
New York
From the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Institute, New York.
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