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Fetal stimulation of maternal immunoglobulin production in mice
Authors:J Carter  D W Dresser
Abstract:Within 12-24 h of parturition in mice, there was a dramatic increase in the number of immunoglobulin secreting cells in the paraaortic lymph nodes (PALN) draining the pregnant uterus. Compared with stimulation with lipopolysaccharide the ratio of IgG:IgM forming cells was very high in PALN draining a pregnant uterus. The response was eliminated when fetectomy (ablating the embryo but leaving the placenta intact) was carried out on the 12th day of pregnancy. With unilateral fetectomy the uterine horn with intact fetal/placental units can be used as a positive control since lymphoid drainage is laterally confined. Neither healthy (gross and histological criteria) nor partly necrotic placentae stimulated Ig secreting cells in the PALN. The placentae of bilaterally fetectomized females were delivered apparently normally and at about the same time as normal (control) fetuses. Injection of prostaglandin E-2 or F-2 alpha into the tail base led to the appearance of Ig-forming cells in the PALN of normal (virgin) female mice. Indomethacin fed to the pregnant female greatly reduced the numbers of these cells in the PALN. We conclude that the observed local stimulation of maternal Ig production by the fetus may be involved in the transplacental transfer of Ig from mother to fetus.
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