Abstract
Oral administration can induce unresponsiveness to protein antigens. Therefore, we examined whether oral administration of xeno-antigen could induce the prolonged survival of xenogeneic skin grafts. CBA mice were given 1 x 10(7) SD rat splenocytes orally, 7 days before transplantation of a SD rat skin in the presence or absence of a non-depleting anti-CD4 monoclonal antibody (mAb) (YTS177, 200 microg/dose, 8 and 7 days relative to transplantation). All skin grafts survived with a median survival time (MST) of 62 days when xeno-antigens were administered orally in combination with anti-CD4 mAb. Mice treated with anti-CD4 mAb alone or oral administration of xeno-antigen alone induced modest prolonged survival of rat skin grafts (MST = 18 and 19 days, respectively) while naive mice rejected rat skin acutely (MST= 12 days). Oral administration alone or combined with anti-CD4 mAb reduced the level of xeno-antibody production compared with that in untreated mice after transplantation. Xenogeneic mixed leukocyte response was reduced when splenocytes from mice pre-treated with oral administration of xenogeneic cells were used as the responder compared with that in untreated mice. Oral delivery of xeno-antigen plus non-depleting anti-CD4 mAb can induce prolongation of concordant xenogeneic skin grafts.
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