Abstract

Contact sensitivity (CS) to 2,4-dinitrochlorobenzene (DNCB) was produced in inbred JY1-strain guinea pigs by the intradermal injection of epidermal cells (ECs) prepared from DNCB-painted skin (DNP-ECs). When the site of DNP-EC-induced CS was pretreated by tape stripping, the rate and intensity of the challenge reactions to DNCB were diminished. The ability of DNP-ECs to induce CS returned to normal when normal peritoneal macrophages together with DNP-ECs were administered into the stripped skin. Normal ECs had a similar effect. Using either anti-Ia antiserum and complement or allogeneic ECs (strains 2 and 13), Ia-positive cells among the ECs (presumably Langerhans cells) were found to be essential for the recovery of CS. Tape-stripping treatment also resulted in the development of immunological tolerance, as assessed by subsequent painting with a sensitizing dose of DNCB. These findings suggest that the immunological function of the mononuclear-phagocyte system in the dermis may be impaired when the epidermal surface is markedly disturbed by tape-stripping treatment.

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