Protection against Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection by adoptive immunotherapy. Requirement for T cell-deficient recipients.
Open Access
- 1 July 1983
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of Experimental Medicine
- Vol. 158 (1) , 74-83
- https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.158.1.74
Abstract
The results of this study demonstrate that spleen cells taken from mice at the height of the primary immune response to intravenous infection with Mycobacterium tuberculosis possess the capacity to transfer adoptive protection to M. tuberculosis-infected recipients, but only if these recipients are first rendered T cell-deficient, either by thymectomy and gamma irradiation, or by sublethal irradiation. A similar requirement was necessary to demonstrate the adoptive protection of the lungs after exposure to an acute aerosol-delivered M. tuberculosis infection. In both infectious models successful adoptive immunotherapy was shown to be mediated by T lymphocytes, which were acquired in the donor animals in response to the immunizing infection. It is proposed that the results of this study may serve as a basic model for the subsequent analysis of the nature of the T cell-mediated immune response to both systemic and aerogenic infections with M. tuberculosis.Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- Non-H-2 restriction of expression of passively transferred delayed sensitivity.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1982
- The immunology of tuberculosis.Published by Elsevier ,1982
- Induction and expression of immunity after BCG immunizationInfection and Immunity, 1977
- Mouse lymphocytes with and without surface immunoglobulin: Preparative scale separation in polystyrene tissue culture dishes coated with specifically purified anti-immunoglobulinJournal of Immunological Methods, 1977
- Importance of thymus-derived lymphocytes in cell-mediated immunity to infectionCellular Immunology, 1973
- Cell-mediated resistance to aerogenic infection of the lung.Published by Elsevier ,1971
- The relationship of delayed hypersensitivity to acquired antituberculous immunity: I. Tuberculin sensitivity and resistance to reinfection in BCG-vaccinated miceCellular Immunology, 1970
- CONTACT SENSITIVITY IN THE MOUSEThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1970
- QUANTITATIVE STUDIES OF THE ADOPTIVE IMMUNOLOGICAL MEMORY IN MICEThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1966
- Passive Transfer of Resistance to Tuberculosis Through Use of Monocytes.Experimental Biology and Medicine, 1960