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Immunological Tolerance to the Thymus‐Independent Antigen Dextran can be Abrogated by Thymus‐Dependent Dextran Conjugates: Evidence against Clonal Deletion as the Mechanism of Tolerance Induction
Author(s) -
MÖLLER G.,
FERNANDEZ C.
Publication year - 1978
Publication title -
scandinavian journal of immunology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.934
H-Index - 88
eISSN - 1365-3083
pISSN - 0300-9475
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-3083.1978.tb00493.x
Subject(s) - dextran , immune tolerance , antigen , immune system , biology , clone (java method) , keyhole limpet hemocyanin , epitope , hemocyanin , receptor , immunology , clonal deletion , microbiology and biotechnology , t cell , t cell receptor , biochemistry , dna
Tolerance to the α1–6 epitope of native dextran B512 was found to be very stable and could not be broken by the injection of dextran conjugated to several substances, such as protein A, keyhole limpet haemocyanin, edistin, concanvalin A or Staphylococcus bacteria, strain Cowan. However, when tolerant mice were injected with dextranase, all the above conjugates induced a strong anti‐α1–6 immune response. In contrast, native dextran itself never induced a response in tolerant, dextranase‐treated mice. It was concluded that tolerance only affects the specific B‐cell subpopulation that can respond to the polyclonal B‐cell‐activating (PBA) property of dextran, whereas other specific B cells having PBA receptors for, e.g., signals delivered by collaborating T cells remain in a resting state. These B cells can respond in a specific immune response against the tolerogen after removal of the antigen, which blocks the Ig receptors and therefore prevents them from passively focusing the antigen. Thus, immunological tolerance is not caused by clonal elimination of the antigen‐specific clone, but only affects a small subfraction of cells with Ig receptors against the tolerogen.