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Title: A study of the mechanism of Con A-induced immunosuppression in vivo. Author: Smith SR, Umland S, Terminelli C, Watnick AS. Journal: Cell Immunol; 1984 Aug; 87(1):147-58. PubMed ID: 6234994. Abstract: The plaque-forming cell (PFC) response to sheep erythrocytes (SRBC) is suppressed in a dose-related manner when concanavalin A (Con A) is administered intravenously to mice prior to or after immunization with antigen. The magnitude of suppression as well as the duration of the Con A effect greatly depends on the concentration of antigen used for immunization. Although profound suppression of the anti-SRBC PFC response is observed in intact mice pretreated with Con A for 4-24 hr, spleen cells from these mice do not exhibit suppressive activity when transferred into normal recipients or when cotransferred with normal spleen cells into irradiated recipients. Moreover, the cells from Con A-treated mice respond as normal spleen cells to SRBC when transferred alone into irradiated hosts. Suppression of the anti-SRBC PFC is only observed when adoptive hosts of cells from Con A-treated mice are also injected with Con A within 48 hr (but not 72 hr) of cell transfer and immunization. This time course of responsiveness to the suppressive effects of Con A is similar to that observed in normal mice and in irradiated recipients of normal spleen cells. The immune response to SRBC is also suppressed in adoptive hosts of normal spleen cells that are pretreated with Con A 4-24 hr prior to irradiation and cell transfer. Although functionally inactive when transferred into adoptive hosts, spleen cells from mice pretreated with Con A for 4-24 hr can suppress a primary antibody response to SRBC in vitro. The suppressive activity, which cannot be detected in the spleens of mice when the interval between pretreatment and assay is longer than 24 hr, is present in a subpopulation that bears the Thy 1.2 and Lyt 2 phenotype. Taken together the results obtained in in vivo and in vitro functional assays suggest that a suppressor cell population is activated following in vivo treatment with Con A, but that the cells rapidly lose their state of activation when removed from a Con A environment. This phenomenon is in all probability responsible for the failure to demonstrate suppressive activity in the spleens of Con A-treated mice using in vivo functional assays.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]