scholarly journals DNA epitope vaccine containing complement component C3d enhances anti-amyloid-β antibody production and polarizes the immune response towards a Th2 phenotype

2008 ◽  
Vol 205 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 57-63 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nina Movsesyan ◽  
Mikayel Mkrtichyan ◽  
Irina Petrushina ◽  
Ted M. Ross ◽  
David H. Cribbs ◽  
...  
2020 ◽  
Vol 50 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Marco Aurélio Chiara Silva ◽  
Miriele Caroline da Silva ◽  
João Waine Pinheiro ◽  
Raul Jorge Hernan Castro-Goméz ◽  
Alice Eiko Murakami ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT: Advances in the fields of glycobiology and immunology have provided many insights into the role of carbohydrate-protein interactions in the immune system. Jacalin of Artocarpus integrifolia (JCA) and structural mannoprotein of Saccharomyces uvarum (MPS) are molecules with immunomodulatory properties. JCA is an IgA human lectin binding molecule that causes the mitogenic stimulation of immune cells, production of cytokines, chemotaxis, and activation of leukocytes. Studies on the immunomodulatory properties of JCA and MPS in mammals and fish suggest that they have an action on antibody production. The aim of this study was to investigate the possible action of JCA and MPS on the production of specific antibodies in laying hens. For this, laying hens were inoculated with an intra abdominal injection of sheep red blood cells (SRBC) with either JCA (0.075 µg, 0.75 µg, and 7.5 µg) or MPS (20 µg and 100 µg). Levels of anti-SRBC antibodies of the IgY, IgM, and IgA classes were evaluated by ELISA. Results showed that JCA and MPS have immunomodulatory effects on levels of anti-SRBC IgM, IgA, and IgY. An immunostimulatory effect of JCA was observed in primary immune response on anti-SRBC IgY, while an inhibitory effect of JCA and MPS was observed in secondary immune response on the production of IgM and IgA anti-SRBC. These results suggested that MPS and JCA have immunomodulatory effects on antibody production and could be used in future studies on humoral immune response in poultry.


1972 ◽  
Vol 136 (5) ◽  
pp. 1195-1206 ◽  
Author(s):  
John C. Ordal ◽  
F. Carl Grumet

The transfer of parental (H-2k/k) nonresponder lymphoid cells into heterozygous (H-2k/q) nonresponder recipients at the time of primary challenge with aqueous poly-L(Tyr,Glu)-poly-D,L-Ala-poly-L-Lys [(T,G)-A--L] elicited the production of both IgM and IgG anti-(T,G)-A--L antibody. Normally, the production of IgG anti-(T,G)-A--L antibody is restricted to strains possessing the responder Ir-1 allele. The timing and intensity of the graft-versus-host (GVH) reaction required for this effect were found to be critical. Injection of H-2k/k cells into H-2k/q recipients 1 wk before antigen challenge did not elicit IgG anti-(T,G)-A--L antibody production, and markedly suppressed IgM anti-(T,G)-A--L antibody production. The transfer of alloimmune (H-2q-primed) H-2k/k cells at the time of antigen challenge was also associated with no IgG and little IgM anti-(T,G)-A--L antibody production. These data are consistent with the model that nonresponder thymus-derived lymphocytes (T cells) activated in a GVH reaction can substitute for (T,G)-A--L-reactive T cells to induce a shift from IgM to IgG anti-(T,G)-A--L antibody production.


1970 ◽  
Vol 132 (5) ◽  
pp. 845-857 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. S. Byers ◽  
E. E. Sercarz

Induction of the immune response can only be completed after antigen is removed from the cellular environment. Primed rabbit lymph node fragments were cultured in vitro with 5 mg/ml BSA. If antigen was removed from the fragments 2 hr later, they produced a normal anti-BSA response, which was first evident 5 days later. If antigen removal was delayed for 3 days, the onset of the response was postponed for 2 to 3 days. Pulses with BUDR marked the periods of cell proliferation in both sets of cultures, and established that the postponement of antibody production was preceded by a postponement in the wave of proliferation among precursors of antibody forming cells. The similarity in avidity of antibody-containing fluids from normal and postponed cultures support the idea that the same cell population produced the response in each case. It was concluded that a reversible state of paralysis could be instituted in antigen-responsive cells, and this state did not depend upon cell-killing. The widespread incidence of temporary paralysis as an early aspect of the immune response was discussed.


Blood ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 128 (22) ◽  
pp. 22-22 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amanda Mener ◽  
Connie M. Arthur ◽  
Seema R. Patel ◽  
Sean R. Stowell

Abstract Background:Red blood cell (RBC) transfusion can result in the development of alloantibodies that can make it difficult to find compatible RBCs for future transfusions and increase the risk of hemolytic transfusion reactions. Despite the consequences of RBC alloimmunization, the factors that regulate this process remain relatively unknown. Recent studies suggest that complement deposition on an antigen surface can significantly enhance the immune response to foreign antigen. As many anti-RBC alloantibodies fix complement and RBCs otherwise lack known adjuvants, early antibody-mediated complement deposition may serve as a key regulator that enhances antibody production. To test this, we employed the KEL RBC model system, which employs RBCs that transgenically express the human KEL antigen specifically on RBCs (KEL RBCs). Using this system, we examined the immunological consequence of KEL RBC exposure following transfusion into C57BL/6 wild-type (WT) or complement component 3 (C3) knockout (KO) recipients. Methods: KEL RBCs were transfused into WT or C3 KO recipients, followed by serum collection on days 3, 5, 7, 14, and 21 post-transfusion. Antibody development in WT or C3 KO recipients was examined by flow crossmatch, where serum was incubated with KEL RBCs followed by antibody detection with fluorescently-tagged secondary anti-IgM and anti-IgG antibodies using flow cytometry. To determine the impact of complement deposition on the level of detectable antigen on the RBC surface, RBCs were labeled with the lipophilic dye, DiI, prior to transfusion and then sampled 1, 2, 3, 5, 7 and 9 days post-transfusion. The level of detectable KEL antigen, complement deposition, KEL RBC survival and antibody bound to the RBC surface was measured by flow cytometry. To examine the effect of complement deposition on the level of KEL protein in the RBC membrane post-transfusion, RBCs stroma was isolated at various time points post transfusion, followed by western blot analysis for the KEL protein. Results: While KEL RBCs induced robust anti-KEL antibody formation and C3 deposition in WT recipients, similar exposure to KEL RBCs in C3 KO recipients actually resulted in an unexpected increase in IgM and IgG anti-KEL antibodies when compared to WT recipients. To determine the consequence of C3 deposition, we examined the potential impact of antibody engagement and complement fixation on KEL antigen levels. Consistent with a potential role for complement in directly impacting KEL antigen availability to the immune system, KEL RBCs transferred into WT recipients experienced a decrease in the level of detectable KEL antigen over time that paralleled the development of anti-KEL antibodies and C3 deposition. In contrast, C3 KO recipients failed to experience the same degree of KEL antigen reduction despite the development of significant anti-KEL antibodies over this same time period. Western blot analysis of RBCs post-transfusion revealed that loss of detectable KEL antigen on the RBC surface paralleled a complete lack of detectable KEL antigen in RBC membranes, indicating that C3 may actually facilitate the removal of KEL from the RBC surface. Conclusion: These results suggest an unexpected role for C3 in negatively regulating antibody responses following RBC transfusion. The impact of C3 on the developing alloantibody response strongly suggests that C3-mediated loss of antigen over time likely reduces antigen availability to the immune system, thereby facilitating the inhibition of antibody production over time. These results not only provide novel insight into potential impact of antigen modulation on the development of an immune response to a RBC alloantigen, but also suggest a completely unexpected role for complement in negatively regulating alloantibody production. In doing so, these results suggest that unique differences in complement activity and overall activation following RBC alloantigen exposure between individuals may represent a previously unrecognized factor that influences alloantibody formation following RBC transfusion. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


1963 ◽  
Vol 117 (3) ◽  
pp. 479-496 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joseph A. Bellanti ◽  
Donald V. Eitzman ◽  
John B. Robbins ◽  
Richard T. Smith

By intensive stimulation with large amounts of Salmonella flagellar antigen, newborn rabbits were induced to form high titer flagellar agglutinins usually by the 7th to 10th day of life. Characterization of the agglutinins at various times during the first 30 days of life revealed that the earliest antibody which appeared was a gamma-1 macroglobulin, and that 7S gamma-2 globulins did not appear until the 4th or 5th week of life. In contrast, the adult animals produced macroglobulin antibodies for only 3 to 5 days before the lower molecular weight variety appeared. The infant macroglobulin appears to be similar in all respects to adult macroglobulin antibodies. These data are interpreted to indicate that the newborn and adult rabbit differ in their response to this type of stimulus not in timing of macroglobulin antibody production, but chiefly in the prolonged interval, which precedes the development of the capacity for the 7S type response in the newborn animal.


1972 ◽  
Vol 135 (6) ◽  
pp. 1228-1246 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sefik S. Alkan ◽  
E. Brady Williams ◽  
Danute E. Nitecki ◽  
Joel W. Goodman

L-Tyrosine azobenzene-p-arsonate (RAT) induced cellular immunity without antibody production in guinea pigs. Bifunctional antigens were prepared consisting of one RAT carrier moiety linked either directly to a dinitrophenyl (DNP) haptenic determinant or through one or more 6-amino-caproyl (SAC) spacers. Each SAC unit has an extended span of 8 A. Guinea pigs immunized with these conjugates developed cellular immunity directed against the RAT determinant and antibody specific for the DNP determinant. The anti-DNP response was the same with one or three SAC spacers, but was significantly weaker when the two determinants were joined without a spacer. Animals immunized with either DNP-SAC-TYR or DNP-TYR developed neither cellular nor humoral immunity. Prior immunization with RAT potentiated the secondary anti-hapten response to DNP-SAC-RAT. Modification of RAT at either the arsonate or tyrosine positions showed that other charged groups (sulfonate and trimethylammonium) could substitute for arsonate without loss of immunogenicity. Removal of either the amino or carboxyl group from the side chain of tyrosine did not abolish immunogenicity, but immunogenicity was lost upon removal of both. Immunization with symmetrical bifunctional RAT-(SAC)n-RAT and cyclo-(L-RAT-D-RAT) antigens led to cellular immunity but no anti-arsonate antibody, suggesting a barrier to "self-help." These compounds were also ineffective in inducing a secondary anti-arsonate response in animals primed with arsonate-BSA conjugates and RAT.


1961 ◽  
Vol 154 (956) ◽  
pp. 398-417 ◽  

An attempt has been made to study the cellular inheritance of the induced state of cellular differentiation associated with a secondary immune response. Lymphoid cells have been transferred from donor mice immunized against a protein antigen (bovine gamma globulin) into lethally X -irradiated recipients of the same inbred strain. Evidence is discussed which has led to the assumption that the cells capable of producing a secondary response divide in an irradiated environment. The experiments described here have been designed to show the effect of cell division on the capacity of these cells to produce antibody. The rate of anti­body production in an immune response has been measured by means of the antigen-elimina­tion technique. This technique has been calibrated in passive immunization experiments using an antiserum prepared in outbred mice. The amount of division by the transferred immunized cells before challenge was varied in two ways. First, mice were challenged at different intervals after the transfer of the same number of immunized cells into each recipient mouse. Secondly, different numbers of cells were injected into mice, and these left for a time sufficient for the smallest inoculum used to recolonize the host completely. In the first type of experiment, the results showed that the capacity to produce a secondary response steadily declined with increasing time. Control experiments showed that such a decline can occur after active immunization in non-irradiated mice. In the second type of experiment, the rate of antibody production was directly proportional to the size of the original inoculum of immunized cells. It seems that the rate of antibody production is not increased by cell division. The results are prob­ably, therefore, incompatible with those hypotheses which postulate that all of the mechan­ism responsible for antibody synthesis is capable of replication.


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