Back to Search Start Over

Resistant nature of T cells of autoimmune mice to tolerance induction with human serum albumin.

Authors :
Fujiwara, M.
Kariyone, A.
Source :
Immunology; Dec82, Vol. 47 Issue 4, p573-579, 7p
Publication Year :
1982

Abstract

Inducibility of immunological tolerance to a T-dependent antigen, human serum albumin, was studied in autoimmune mice (NZB, MRL/Mp-1pr/1pr and male BXSB mice), comparing with non-autoimmune mice (BALB/c, DBA/2, MRL/Mp- +/+ and female BXSB mice). Weekly injections of increasing doses of the tolerogen into DBA/2 mice induced T-cell tolerance without the participation of suppressor cells and without affecting B cells. All of the autoimmune mice tested were refractory to the tolerogen; partial tolerance (40%-60% responsiveness) was attained in mice aged 1 month, but not in older mice. By comparison, tolerance was induced in non-autoimmune mice to a similar degree irrespective of the age of the mice. The tolerance inducibility was also examined in reciprocal bone marrow cell (BMC) transfer experiments between NZB and DBA/2 mice and also BMC transfer into B10.D2 mice. It was shown that recipients of NZB BMC were more resistant to tolerance induction than those of DBA/2 BMC, while irradiated NZB mice receiving DBA/2 BMC were susceptible. Hence, it is suggested that the tolerance-resistant nature of the NZB mice was inherent in T-cell precursors in the bone marrow and not in the host environment. Similar findings in support of this notion were also observed in BSXB mice. The significance of tolerance resistance in the development of autoimmunity is discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00192805
Volume :
47
Issue :
4
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Immunology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
13942253