Idiotypes of anti-Ia antibodies. II. Effects of in vivo treatment with xenogeneic anti-idiotype.
Open Access
- 1 October 1982
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in The Journal of Immunology
- Vol. 129 (4) , 1545-1552
- https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.129.4.1545
Abstract
The effects of in vivo treatment with xenogeneic anti-idiotypic antibodies were examined in an anti-Ia idiotypic system. Monoclonal antibody 14-4-4S, specific for Ia.7, has been shown to bear idiotopes that are expressed at readily detectable levels in conventional alloantibody responses. Sera from mice treated with purified anti-idiotypic antibodies (anti-Id) were found to contain inhibitory activity in an ELISA specific for the 14-4-4S Id, whereas sera from control mice treated with heterologous normal Ig did not. In addition, sera of anti-Id-treated C3H.SW mice contained specific anti-I-E activity, shown by binding to B10.A(2R) but not B10.A(4R) LPS blasts in flow microfluorometry. The anti-I-E induced by anti-Id included more IgG1 than IgG2. Even though a significant amount of anti-I-E activity was present in the serum, absorption analysis showed that most of the idiotope-positive antibody was not I-Ek-specific. Penetrance of induction of anti-I-E by anti-Id was 100% in the C3H.SW mice tested, and activity persisted in the serum for at least 8 to 9 mo in some cases. B10 mice produced only marginal anti-I-E activity after treatment, suggesting that induction is due to specific triggering rather than due entirely to a resemblance of anti-Id to the I-E antigen. The results thus indicate long-lasting alterations in an anti-Ia idiotypic system in the absence of exposure to conventional antigen, and represent specific manipulation of anti-Ia immunity.This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Induction of anti-H–2 antibodies without alloantigen exposure by in vivo administration of anti-idiotypeNature, 1981
- Fc (IgG) receptor distributions in homogeneous and heterogeneous cell populations by flow microfluorometry.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1981
- Release of Ia antigens by a cultured B cell line.The Journal of Immunology, 1980