Abstract

Intranasal (i.n.) immunization is an effective route for inducing mucosal immune responses especially in the upper respiratory tract and mouth. To characterize the cells involved in these responses, nasal lymphoid tissue (NALT; considered to be the equivalent of Waldeyer's ring in humans) of normal mice, and of mice immunized intranasally with a bacterial protein antigen conjugated to cholera toxin B subunit, was isolated and the lymphoid cells analysed according to surface phenotype, immunoglobulin and antibody secretion, and cytokine profile. Compared with cells obtained from Peyer's patches (PP), NALT cells contained a higher proportion of T cells, especially naive (CD45RB+hi) T-helper cells, and fewer surface (s)IgA+ cells. Both tissues contained high proportions of sIgM+ IgD+ unswitched B cells. After i.n. immunization, IgA antibody-secreting cells were increased, indicating that isotype switching and differentiation of B cells to IgA-secreting cells occurred in NALT, whereas smaller numbers of antibody-secreting cells were found in PP after intragastric (i.g.) immunization. Antigen-specific memory cells persisted in NALT for at least 8 months after initial immunization. The cytokine expression profiles of antigen-stimulated NALT and PP cells of immunized mice, revealed by reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction analysis of mRNA, were similar. Both NALT and PP cells tended to express type 2 earlier or for longer than type 1 cytokine mRNA, but NALT cells tended to express interleukin-4 (IL-4) earlier, and IL-5 for a longer period, than PP cells. Thus NALT shares with PP cell populations typical of a mucosal inductive site, including unswitched B cells and naive T-helper (Th) cells. After i.n. immunization, NALT has the capacity to provide help for B-cell maturation and differentiation, as well as to maintain immune memory.

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