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. 1996 Jun 15;170(2):291-5.
doi: 10.1006/cimm.1996.0163.

Anti-CD4 monoclonal antibodies suppress murine collagen-induced arthritis only at the time of primary immunisation

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Anti-CD4 monoclonal antibodies suppress murine collagen-induced arthritis only at the time of primary immunisation

R O Williams et al. Cell Immunol. .

Abstract

We have examined the ability of a mixture of two anti-CD4 mAbs to protect against collagen-induced arthritis. Anti-CD4 mAbs, administered around the time of primary immunisation with type II collagen in adjuvant, reduced the subsequent incidence of arthritis from 67 to 16% (P < 0.01 by Fisher exact test). However, anti-CD4 treatment 3 weeks after the primary immunisation did not significantly affect the incidence of arthritis. This result extends earlier findings concerning the lack of efficacy of anti-CD4 treatment in established collagen-induced arthritis. Next, the ability of anti-CD4 treatment to induce tolerance to bovine type II collagen (and hence protect against arthritis) was evaluated using a regime known to be capable of inducing tolerance to human gamma-globulin. Anti-CD4 treatment completely failed to induce tolerance to type II collagen, as judged by levels of anti-collagen antibody, or protect against collagen-induced arthritis. These findings highlight the potential limitations of anti-CD4 mAb depleting treatment in immunotherapy.

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