In vivo administration of interleukin 1 to normal mice depresses their capacity to elicit contact hypersensitivity responses: prostaglandins are involved in this modification of immune function
- PMID: 3104480
- DOI: 10.1111/1523-1747.ep12469071
In vivo administration of interleukin 1 to normal mice depresses their capacity to elicit contact hypersensitivity responses: prostaglandins are involved in this modification of immune function
Abstract
The administration of pyrogenic doses of interleukin 1 (IL-1) to normal mice before contact sensitization with dinitrofluorobenzene (DNFB) resulted in a significant reduction in the intensity of the elicited contact hypersensitivity (CH) responses. Adoptive transfer experiments established no difference between normal and IL-1-pretreated mice regarding their capacity to generate splenic suppressor-cell activity and lymph node effector-cell activity in response to DNFB. However, a marked reduction in the intensity of elicited responses was observed when primed CH-effector cells, obtained from normal donors, were adoptively transferred to IL-1-pretreated recipients. This finding was paralleled by a consistent reduction in the ability of the adoptively transferred cells to infiltrate the tissue sites of antigen challenge in the IL-1-pretreated animals. Treatment of mice with indomethacin, a potent inhibitor of prostaglandin production, abrogated the capacity of IL-1 to depress CH responses following skin sensitization with DNFB. Similarly, indomethacin was also capable of abrogating the ability of IL-1 to depress CH responses of adoptive recipients of primed CH-effector cells. Our results indicate that the capacity of IL-1 to depress CH responses in normal mice is due to an indomethacin-sensitive process, presumably mediated through the IL-1-induced generation and action of prostaglandins. This was supported by our finding that treatment of mice with arachidonic acid or prostaglandin E2 caused a similar type of inhibition. The mechanism(s) responsible for this effect appears to act at the efferent level of the CH response, as evidenced by the reduced capacity of CH-effector cells to infiltrate the tissue sites of antigen challenge.
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