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  • Title: Active induction of unresponsiveness (tolerance) to DNFB by in vivo ultraviolet-exposed epidermal cells is dependent upon infiltrating class II MHC+ CD11bbright monocytic/macrophagic cells.
    Author: Hammerberg C, Duraiswamy N, Cooper KD.
    Journal: J Immunol; 1994 Dec 01; 153(11):4915-24. PubMed ID: 7963554.
    Abstract:
    Contact sensitizers, tumor Ags, and microbial pathogens presented through UV-exposed skin result in T cell-mediated immune tolerance (inhibition of acquisition of responsiveness) to these normally potent immunogens. The APC in UV-exposed skin that delivers the signals inducing tolerance remains highly controversial and is the subject of this study. Application of the contact sensitizer, 2,4-dinitro-1-fluorobenzene (DNFB), to C3H/HeN mice immediately after a single dose of 72 mJ/cm2 UVB (138 mJ/cm2 total UVB) resulted in unresponsiveness to an initial DNFB ear challenge, but failed to block the development of responsiveness after a second sensitization on previously unexposed skin (no tolerance). A state of tolerance could only be achieved if a delay of 72 h was allowed to elapse between the UV exposure and the initial sensitization. Epidermal cell suspensions (EC) were prepared from the skin of normal controls and from skin exposed to the same UV dose 3 days before (UV-EC). Three days after in vivo UV exposure, Langerhans cells (CD11blow Ia+) were depleted, and CD11bbright Ia+ macrophages had appeared in the epidermis along with GR-1+ neutrophils. Intracutaneous injection of 2,4 dinitrobenzenesulfonic acid (DNBSO3)-haptenated UV-EC, but not normal controls, resulted in the induction of locally inducible Ag-specific tolerance to DNFB, indicating the presence and dominance of tolerogenic signal within in vivo-irradiated epidermis. Removal of CD11b+ and class II MHC+ cells within UV-EC showed that a CD11b+ class II MHC+ population was indeed critical for tolerance induction. In addition, tolerance induction by UV-EC was not a result of surviving, UV-exposed Langerhans cells, because haptenated 3-day cultured EC from epidermis removed 5 h after UV exposure (before leukocytic infiltration) failed to induce a tolerogenic state. In conclusion, the ability of UV-exposed skin to induce peripheral adult tolerance to a normally potent immunogen is critically dependent on inflammatory class II MHC+, CD11bbright monocytic/macrophagic cells that infiltrate UV-irradiated skin at the same time the ability to tolerize is acquired.
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