Abstract

This study was undertaken to determine whether the specific Th1- or Th2-cell response to varicella-zoster virus was induced predominantly by a mucosal adjuvant, cholera toxin, in mice. A commercially available live varicella vaccine (Oka strain) and cholera toxin or its B subunit were administered simultaneously via the nasal route. Delayed-type hypersensitivity to the Oka vaccine was induced, but the systemic neutralizing antibody response was low. The delayed-type hypersensitivity evoked after a single administration was relatively higher than that on administration three times. When spleen cells from mice immunized once with the vaccine and cholera toxin or its B subunit were restimulated with the live vaccine in vitro, there was greater thymidine uptake and production of interleukin- 2 (IL-2) than controls, but only a low level of IL-4 production. The production of IL-2 induced by the B subunit of cholera toxin was less than that by cholera toxin and a mutant of Escherichia coli enterotoxin on co-immunization with the vaccine in mice. Cholera toxin and its B subunit have been reported to induce predominantly a specific Th2-type T-cell response to various antigens. However, the Oka vaccine is an antigen that polarizes the activation of specific Th1/Th2-type T cells by cholera toxin or its B subunit to the Th1-type side. Cholera toxin and its B subunit are thus useful mucosal adjuvants for inducing cellular immunity to the Oka vaccine similar to Escherichia coli enterotoxin.

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