Abstract

A single intravenous injection of deaggregated preparations of lightly substituted dinitrophenylated human gamma globulin (DNP-HGG) induced DNP-specific tolerance in adult CBA mice, as judged by their failure to mount an IgM anti-DNP antibody-forming cell (AFC) response following challenge with the thymus-independent antigen, polymerized flagellin substituted with DNP (DNP-POL). Tolerance was also readily achieved in nude mice. Experiments using bovine serum albumin as the DNP carrier in both strains suggested that this was a less effective carrier for tolerance induction. The spleen cells from mice injected with DNP-HGG failed to respond to challenge with DNP-POL in vitro, but marked recovery of responsiveness occurred when the cells were challenged after adoptive transfer. These observations indicate that tolerance among antibody-forming cell precursors may selectively affect subpopulations. They further show that the choice of a read-out system used to analyze tolerance in B cells may critically influence the results.

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