Abstract

Juvenile strain 13 guinea pigs were immunized with myelin basic protein (MBP) combined with galactocerebrosides (MBP + GC) or with total myelin lipids without GC [MBP + (TL − GC)] in CFA. Control animals received dinitrophenylated-ovalbumin (DNP-OA) in CFA, CFA or IFA alone. The animals injected with MBP + GC showed a higher rate of recovery from the first EAE episode (83%) than those treated with MBP + (TL − GC) (50%). With the exception of the group treated with IFA alone, all animals were refractory to EAE following rechallenge with MBP in CFA 90 days after the first exposure. The in vitro proliferative response to MBP, of peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBLs) derived from guinea pigs freshly sensitized to MBP in CFA, was drastically suppressed in the presence of PBLs from animals injected with MBP + GC. Upon transfer to normal syngeneic recipients, spleen cells from MBP + GC-treated animals completely suppressed the clinical and histological manifestations of EAE following recipient challenge with MBP in CFA. Cell-free supernatants from PBLs and spleen cells of strain 13 guinea pigs treated with MBP + GC inhibited lymphocyte proliferation to MBP, of allogeneic responder cells, and spleen cell supernatants completely suppressed the induction of EAE upon transfer to allogeneic recipients. Suppression could not be transferred with cells from other treated groups. These results suggest that animals immunized with MBP + galactocerebrosides in CFA develop suppressor cells that may be in part responsible for the recovery from the first EAE episode and for protection against rechallenge with MBP in CFA. Their cell-free supernatants act in an MHC-nonrestricted fashion. These results do not rule out an additional protective mechanism since all animals exposed to CFA were refractory to rechallenge despite lack of demonstrable suppressor Cell activity.

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