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Title: Active suppression in orally tolerized rats coincides with in situ transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) expression in the draining lymph nodes. Author: Lundin BS, Karlsson MR, Svensson LA, Hanson LA, Dahlgren UI, Telemo E. Journal: Clin Exp Immunol; 1999 Apr; 116(1):181-7. PubMed ID: 10209524. Abstract: Adult rats were fed pellets containing ovalbumin (OvA) during 4 weeks, and were 2 weeks thereafter immunized subcutaneously with a mixture of OvA and human serum albumin (HSA) in Freund's complete adjuvant (day 0). As a result of the immunization, the draining lymph nodes of the nontolerized (control) rats were heavily enlarged from day 10 to day 18; however, this size increase was absent in the OvA-fed rats. This manifestation of active suppression in the tolerized rats was preceded by the appearance of scattered CD4+ TGF-beta-expressing T cells in the T cell area of their lymph nodes (days 5-8); correspondingly, the levels of TGF-beta mRNA in the nodes were elevated in the tolerant rats compared with the control rats. The anti-OvA antibody levels in sera from the rats revealed that there was an initial B cell priming in the OvA-fed group, with levels higher than in the control group during the first week. Thereafter, suppression governed the response, and from day 10 onwards the anti-OvA levels were considerably lower than in the controls. When other groups of animals were pretreated with neutralizing anti-TGF-beta antibodies 1 day before the immunization, the anti-OvA response of the OvA-fed rats was restored to the levels of the control group, demonstrating the importance of TGF-beta in the maintenance of suppression. In conclusion, we demonstrate that TGF-beta-producing cells appear in the draining lymph nodes shortly after immunization in rats made orally tolerant using a relatively high-dose feeding regime; these cells are probably responsible for the down-regulation of the immune response observed in the OvA-fed rats.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]