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Immune status of mice tolerant of living cells. II. Continuous presence and nature of facilitation-enhancing antibodies in tolerant animals.

Abstract
CBA mice were rendered highly tolerant to A/Jax cells by neonatal intravenous injections of (CBA x A)F(1) spleen cells. The high degree of tolerance was ascertained by the absence of circulating antibodies detected in the sera by the usual tests and by the perfect state of A skin grafts during all the experiments. Tolerant sera (sera from tolerant animals) were studied at three periods of tolerance: before skin test grafting, from 2 to 11 wk after grafting, and at time of sacrifice at almost 6 months of age. The tolerant sera were shown to have specific facilitation-enhancing properties promoting the take and growth of A/Jax sarcoma (SaI and /Sa 15091a grafted on normal CBA mice. These properties were present throughout the duration of the experiments, showing that they were not the result of a beginning interruption of tolerance. The tolerant sera, although lacking the usual serological properties (hemagglutination, hemolysis, cytotoxicity, passive cutaneous anaphylaxis) had, however, specific synergistic hemagglutinating properties (increasing the hemagglutinating titer of a reference immune serum). Antibodies giving direct specific hemagglutination could be extracted from spleens of 20% of highly tolerant mice. The tolerant sera were also found to contain more IgG1 and more IgA than normal sera while they contained normal quantities of the complement-fixing immunoglobulins IgG2 and IgM. Fractionation of tolerant sera on DEAE chromatography column confirmed the data concerning immunoglobulin classes and demonstrated direct specific serological activities undetected in unfractionated sera: a weak hemolysis in the most cationic fractions and a weak hemagglutination in the middle fractions. Synergistic hemagglutination, detected in unfractionated serum, was localized in fast anionic fractions containing high IgA concentration, along with facilitation-enhancing activity, thus confirming a link suggested previously between these three properties. The relation between immunological tolerance and facilitating antibodies was discussed in the light of the fact that antibodies, possibly of a particular class continuously present at low dose in the sera of highly tolerant animals, are able to transfer (at least partly) this state of tolerance provided a sensitive test system is utilized.
AuthorsG A Voisin, R G Kinsky, H T Duc
JournalThe Journal of experimental medicine (J Exp Med) Vol. 135 Issue 5 Pg. 1185-203 (May 01 1972) ISSN: 0022-1007 [Print] United States
PMID4623319 (Publication Type: Journal Article)
Chemical References
  • Antibodies
  • Immune Sera
  • Immunoglobulin A
  • Immunoglobulin G
  • Immunoglobulin M
Topics
  • Animals
  • Antibodies (analysis)
  • Chromatography, DEAE-Cellulose
  • Female
  • Graft Rejection
  • Hemagglutination Tests
  • Immune Sera (analysis)
  • Immune Tolerance
  • Immunodiffusion
  • Immunoglobulin A (analysis)
  • Immunoglobulin G (analysis)
  • Immunoglobulin M (analysis)
  • Immunosuppression Therapy
  • Male
  • Mice
  • Mice, Inbred Strains
  • Neoplasm Transplantation
  • Passive Cutaneous Anaphylaxis
  • Sarcoma, Experimental (immunology)
  • Skin Transplantation
  • Spleen (immunology)
  • Transplantation, Homologous

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