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Title: Oral administration of recombinant cholera toxin subunit B inhibits IL-12-mediated murine experimental (trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid) colitis. Author: Boirivant M, Fuss IJ, Ferroni L, De Pascale M, Strober W. Journal: J Immunol; 2001 Mar 01; 166(5):3522-32. PubMed ID: 11207312. Abstract: Trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid (TNBS)-induced colitis is an IL-12-driven, Th1 T cell-mediated colitis that resembles human Crohn's disease. In the present study, we showed initially that the oral administration of recombinant subunit B of cholera toxin (rCT-B) at the time of TNBS-induced colitis by intrarectal TNBS instillation inhibits the development of colitis or, at later time when TNBS-induced colitis is well established, brings about resolution of the colitis. Dose-response studies showed that a majority of mice (68%) treated with rCT-B at a dose of 100 microg (times four daily doses) exhibited complete inhibition of the development of colitis, whereas a minority (30%) treated with rCT-B at a dose of 10 microg (times four daily doses) exhibited complete inhibition; in both cases, however, the remaining mice exhibited some reduction in the severity of inflammation. In further studies, we showed that rCT-B administration is accompanied by prevention/reversal of increased IFN-gamma secretion (the hallmark of a Th1 response) without at the same time causing an increase in IL-4 secretion. This decreased IFN-gamma secretion was not associated with the up-regulation of the secretion of counterregulatory cytokines (IL-10 or TGF-beta), but was associated with a marked inhibition of IL-12 secretion, i.e., the secretion of the cytokine driving the Th1 response. Finally, we showed that rCT-B administration results in increased apoptosis of lamina propria cells, an effect previously shown to be indicative of IL-12 deprivation. From these studies, rCT-B emerges as a powerful inhibitor of Th1 T cell-driven inflammation that can conceivably be applied to the treatment of Crohn's disease.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]