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Effects of carrageenan on immune responses. Studies on the macrophage dependency of various antigens after treatment with carrageenan.
Authors:S Ishizaka  S Otani  S Morisawa
Abstract:Carrageenan, a sulfated polygalactose having macrophage toxic properties, elicited a marked suppression of IgM response to T cell-dependent antigens such as sheep red blood cells (SRBC), dinitrophenylated bovine serum gamma-globulin (DNP-BGG), and trinitrophenylated concanavalin A (TNP-Con A). In contrast, carrageenan did not inhibit antibody responses to such T cell-independent antigens as trinitrophenylated DEAE-dextran (TNP-DEAE-dextran), trinitrophenylated polyvinyl pyrrolidone(TNP-PVP), and trinitrophenylated Ficoll (TNP-Ficoll). Compared to total spleen cells, spleen cells from which macrophages had been removed by adhesion to plastic Petri dishes had less effect on the production of antibody against T cell-dependent antigens, but no change or a rather stimulated effect was observed in in vitro antibiody synthesis against T cell-independent antigens. These results strongly suggest that macrophages are involved in antibody responses to T cell-dependent antigens but not in those to T cell-independent antigens. However, the antibody response to trinitrophenylated lipopolysaccharide (TNP-LPS), a T cell-independent antigen, was inhibited by carrageenan treatment, suggesting that the response is macrophage dependent. Moreover, antibody response to higher doses of dinitrophenylated phytohemagglutinin (DNP-PHA), a T cell-dependent antigen, was shown to be macrophage independent by carrageenan treatment, although the antibody response to low doses of the antigen was macrophage dependent. Considering all these results, carrageenan treatment seems to be a very useful method to determine whether immune response to various antigens are macrophage dependent or not.
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