Abstract

Brown-Norway (BN) rats are uniquely susceptible to development of autoimmune phenomena and enlargement of lymph nodes and spleen after repeated injections of mercuric chloride. Despite its ability to produce autoimmunity, HgCl 2 inhibited the development in BN rats of experimental allergic encephalomyelitis (EAE), another autoimmune process. The inhibition by mercury was probably due to lack of the normal absorption and granulomatous reaction to the EAE inoculum in the enlarged lymph nodes draining the inoculation site. Lewis rats did not develop enlarged nodes from HgCl 2 treatment. Lewis lymph nodes absorbed the EAE inoculum abundantly and developed an extensive granulomatous reaction despite the mercury treatment, and there was only a slight inhibition of EAE. Therefore, the ability of HgCl 2 to produce lymphadenopathy in BN rats may be responsible for the inability of these rats to absorb the inoculated antigen. The mercury-induced failure of absorption was manifested as an inhibition of EAE in BN rats.

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