Effects of pertussis toxin on delayed-type hypersensitivity responses and on the activity of suppressor T cells on the responses |
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Authors: | S Tamura Y Nakanishi A Kojima M Otokawa N Uchida H Sato Y Sato |
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Affiliation: | Department of Pathology, the 1st Department of Bacteriology, and the 2nd Department of Bacteriology, National Institute of Health, 2-10-35 Kamiosaki, Shinagawa-ku, Tokyo 141, Japan |
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Abstract: | Experiments were performed on mice to investigate the effects of pertussis toxin (PT) on delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) to ovalbumin (OA) and on the activity of suppressor T cells on the DTH (DTH-Ts). Mice immunized with alum-precipitated ovalbumin showed a transient DTH, which was determined as footpad swelling which disappeared 2 weeks after immunization. Maximal footpad swelling was observed 24 hr after DTH elicitation. On the other hand, when mice received PT (2 micrograms/mouse) at the time of immunization, the transient DTH became an enhanced and persistent DTH, which persisted for at least 4 weeks. In addition, the time of maximum footpad swelling was delayed from 24 to 48 hr after DTH elicitation. The immune spleen T cells from PT-treated mice showed a persistently high ability to transfer DTH into syngenic naive mice. DTH-Ts was induced in spleens of mice injected iv with OA-coupled syngeneic spleen cells. However, when these mice received PT at the time of suppressor induction, their spleen cells revealed considerably reduced suppressor activity. The activity of DTH-Ts was also reduced when DTH-Ts were either treated in vitro with PT or transferred into PT-injected recipient mice. From these results, interference with the suppressor function of DTH-Ts from PT was considered to be, at least in part, as an enhancing mechanism of DTH. |
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Keywords: | To whom correspondence should be addressed. |
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