Abstract

The effect of ferritin on the delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) response and Arthus-type reaction as assessed by footpad reaction using methylated human serum albumin, human serum albumin, or sheep red blood cells as antigens was investigated. Intraperitoneally administered ferritin was short acting and suppressed either induction or expression of DTH depending on the time of ferritin injection although it did not inhibit the antibody-mediated inflammatory response, the Arthus reaction. Investigation of ferritin's effect on the primary antibody response revealed that the number of IgG plaque-forming cells (PFC) was moderately decreased but IgM PFC were not. These results indicate that the afferent limb, ferritin selectively suppresses antigen presentation and/or clonal expansion of effector cells of cell-mediated immunity, but not that of the antibody response. Antigen presentation by Ia-positive cells and/or lymphokine-responsive inflammatory mononuclear cells at the efferent limb of DTH is suggested to be affected by ferritin. This conclusion is based upon the observations of successful T DTH effector cell transfer from sensitized but ferritin-treated donors and of successful reversal of ferritin-induced suppression of expression of DTH by supplementing normal bone marrow-derived cells containing Ia-positive ones. Thus our in vivo experimental system might be useful for the differential analysis of immunopathological lesions such as a T-cell-mediated, monocyte-dependent and an antibody-mediated inflammatory lesions.

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