Induction of immune tolerance by administration of monoclonal antibody to L3T4.

Abstract
Immune responses can be profoundly altered in mice by treatment with monoclonal antibodies (MAb) to L3T4, the mouse homologue for the CD4 antigen in humans. Treatment of mice with anti-L3T4 blocks both primary and secondary immune responses, delays allograft rejection, and retards autoimmunity. To determine whether anti-L3T4 could also be used to induce tolerance, we investigated the effect of treatment with rat MAb to L3T4 on the immune response to two other rat MAb: MAb to chicken egg ovalbumin (OVA) and MAb to T200, an antigen expressed on all mouse mononuclear blood cells. Treatment with anti-L3T4 prevented the primary humoral response to both of these MAb. Moreover, the anti-L3T4 MAb induced tolerance to itself, and it induced tolerance to the anti-OVA MAb when the two MAb were given concurrently. However, anti-L3T4 did not induce tolerance to the anti-T200 MAb when these MAb were given concurrently. These findings indicate that treatment with MAb to L3T4 may provide a new method for inducing tolerance to some, but not all, antigens. Because L3T4 in mice is homologous to CD4 in humans, our findings suggest that it may be possible to use anti-CD4 to induce tolerance to specific xenogeneic MAb, thereby facilitating their use as therapeutic agents in people.

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