Cholera toxin adjuvant greatly promotes antigen priming of T cells
✍ Scribed by Elisabeth Hörnquist; Nils Lycke
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1993
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 807 KB
- Volume
- 23
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0014-2980
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
Cholera toxin (CT) given perorally is a powerful mucosal immunogen and adjuvant. Information that explains the adjuvant effect of CT may be used for the development of more effective oral vaccines and might also contribute to our understanding of the mechanisms involved in regulating mucosal immunity. The present study was undertaken to investigate if CT administered together with keyhole limpet hemocyanin (KLH) would act to promote or inhibit priming of KLH‐specific T cells and whether the adjuvant effect of CT is restricted to mucosal immune responses or is a generalized phenomenon due to direct immunomodulating effects of CT. We found that CT adjuvant greatly augmented the effectiveness of a single oral priming immunization with KLH: re‐challenge with KLH in vitro 1 week following immunization gave several‐fold stronger proliferation in KLH‐specific spleen, mesenteric lymph node, Peyer's patch and gut lamina propria T cells from KLH + CT adjuvant as opposed to KLH only‐treated mice. Moreover, several‐fold stronger cytokine production, i.e. interleukin (IL)‐2, IL‐4, IL‐5, IL‐6, IL‐10 and interferon‐Y accompanied the enhanced proliferative response of T cells from CT adjuvant‐treated mice. The adjuvant effect of CT was not restricted to mucosal immune responses but was evident also following a single parenteral immunization with KLH + CT. Limiting dilution analysis revealed that CT adjuvant promoted a 20‐ to 40‐fold increase in the frequency of primed KLH‐specific T cells. Phenotypic and functional analyses clearly demonstrated that CT adjuvant primarily enhanced priming of CD4^+^ rather than CD8^+^ T cells and the pattern of lymphokine secretion disclosed that CT most probably promoted antigen priming of both T~h~l and T~h~2 type of CD4^+^ T precursor cells.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
Delivery of foreign antigens to mucosal surfaces, such as the pulmonary airways, has been shown to preferentially induce Th2-mediated responses in humans and in mice. What is not clear from these studies is whether this preferential skewing in responses is the result of the limited types of antigen
## Abstract This study was undertaken to determine whether the specific Th1‐ or Th2‐cell response to varicella‐zoster virus was induced predominantly by a mucosal adjuvant, cholera toxin, in mice. A commercially available live varicella vaccine (Oka strain) and cholera toxin or its B subunit were a