Characterization of an antiserum to guinea pig antithrombin III (AT III). I. Reactivity with guinea pig T lymphocytes.

Abstract
In the course of studies investigating the effects of antisera prepared against a variety of guinea pig proteins on lymphocyte function, a goat antiserum prepared against a guinea pig gamma-globulin preparation was found to react with guinea pig T lymphocytes. This antiserum, serum 592, contained a significant titer of antibodies that were cytotoxic for a subpopulation of lymph node cells and thymocytes, and mitogenic for lymph node T cells. Immunoelectrophoretic analysis and selective absorptions of the antiserum demonstrated that the antigen recognized on thymocytes was also present on an alpha 2 globulin in guinea pig plasma, which, on the basis of physiochemical characteristics and heparin-binding affinity, appeared to be guinea pig antithrombin III (AT III). Although the antiserum was shown to contain antibodies to both protein and carbohydrate determinants on the AT III molecule, studies comparing the effects of 7 M guanidine and periodate oxidation on the antigenicity of the AT III determinant also recognized on the thymocytes indicated that this shared antigenic determinant was carbohydrate in nature. The thymocyte membrane molecule bearing this determinant was also isolated and was found to be a 210,000-dalton macromolecule that was very sensitive to proteolytic and/or autolytic degradation. These data raise the interesting possibility that guinea pig lymphoid cells may have a membrane-associated protease inhibitor related to plasma AT III.