Benjamin Wolf
University of Pennsylvania
13 Papers
148 Citations
Benjamin Wolf is an academic researcher from University of Pennsylvania. The author has contributed to research in topics: Antibody & Antigen. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 13 publications. Previous affiliations of Benjamin Wolf include New York State Department of Health.
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Papers
Antibodies to canine collagen types i and II in dogs with spontaneous cruciate ligament rupture and osteoarthritis
TL;DR: Investigation of antibodies found in the sera and synovial fluids of dogs with spontaneous cruciate ligament rupture and osteoarthritis indicated that the antibodies had been elicited by antigens derived from cruciATE ligaments and from altered joint cartilage, types I and II.
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Dot‐Elisa for the rapid detection of gentamicin in milk
TL;DR: It appears that gentamicin residues can still be detected in milk after 5 days using dot‐ELISA, and dipstick is recommended as a suitable method for wide scale use in field studies and diagnostic laboratories.
21
Equine class II MHC antigens: identification of two sets of epitopes using anti-human monoclonal antibodies.
Dimitri S. Monos,Benjamin Wolf,S. F. Radka,S. Rifat,William J. Donawick,Lawrence R. Soma,C. M. Zmuewski,Malek Kamoun +7 more
TL;DR: Antibody N297 (DQ specific), previously shown to react with an epitope expressed on human B cells but not on mitogen-induced T cells, reacted only with sIg+ cells in 42 of 53 horses tested, which may be due to a low or lack of expression of this determinant on these cells or to a weak cross-reactivity of this antibody with equine antigens.
15
Evidence for active synthesis of two allelic b locus markers by single lymphocytes from heterozygous rabbits.
TL;DR: That simultaneous active synthesis of both allelic markers results in double allotype expression was demonstrated by kinetics data, supporting this was the observation that only after washing of cycloheximide inhibited cells did allotype reexpression resume.
12
Modulation and regrowth of allotype on normal rabbit peripheral blood lymphocytes: allelic inclusion of b4 and b6 in single cells.
Edward S. Kimball,Benjamin Wolf +1 more
TL;DR: The results indicate that normal heterozygous peripheral blood lymphocytes may express both b -locus alleles and that these determinants are in some manner physically associated with one another in the cell membrane.
11