@article{oai:ir.soken.ac.jp:00004035, author = {尚之, 高畑 and TAKAHATA, Naoyuki}, journal = {Human Population Genetics, Human Population Genetics}, month = {}, note = {Researches on tumor transplantation and blood groups simultaneously began at the turn of this century. However, they had nothing in common for the following three decades. The man who eventually brought them together was J.B.S. Haldane (see Klein, 1986; p. 7). In 1933, Haldane made a tour of the United States during which he talked to C.C. Little, then at the Jackson Laboratory in Bar Harbor, about his work on tumor transplantation. In a paper published in Nature Haldane (1933) wrote: The genetics of reaction to transplantable tumours have been very fully worked out by Little and his colleagues. The laws disclosed are precisely similar to those which govern the transplantation of normal tissue or the transfusion of blood or of leukaemic corpuscles.}, pages = {49--65}, title = {Haldane's contribution to the understanding of the evolution of vertebrate immune system}, year = {1993} }