Duc H T, Massé A, Bobé P, Kinsky R G, Voisin G A
J Reprod Immunol. 1985 Jan;7(1):27-39. doi: 10.1016/0165-0378(85)90019-1.
Modifications of the alloimmune response at both the humoral and the cellular levels by placental extracts (PE) syngeneic to the recipient were studied in the mouse using two different H-2 strain combinations. CBA (H-2k) or C57BL/Ks (H-2d), immunized with A/J (H-2a) spleen cells. The tests included in vivo tumor allograft evolution (accelerated rejection or enhancement reactions), and in vitro analysis of the involved immune agents, both cellular and humoral, using mixed lymphocyte reactions (MLR) and biological activity studies of serum samples. Animals from the recipient strains exhibited a delayed rejection of A/J tumor Sa 1 allografts if preimmunization was carried out with 10(6) A/J spleen cells combined with PE syngeneic to the recipients, as compared to controls immunized with A/J cells only or supplemented with isogeneic liver extracts (LE). The serological analysis revealed that PE treatment did not modify the overall hemagglutinating antibody production but resulted simultaneously in both a decreased production of cytotoxic complement fixing antibodies and an increase of specific anaphylactic mast cell degranulating antibodies, as compared to controls. The sera from PE-treated donors also demonstrated enhancing activity following passive transfer to isogeneic recipients. MLR regulatory activity was exhibited by spleen cells from PE- and immunogen-treated mice although the same or stronger activity was obtained from mice immunized without the addition of PE. However, in vivo transfer of these cells to syngeneic recipients showed that PE treatment erased the accelerated rejection caused by allogeneic immunization in the absence of PE and could even cause some degree of allografted tumor enhancement. The cells responsible for this inhibitory effect were mainly IJ+ lymphocytes, since their elimination with a relevant anti-IJ serum and complement restored a secondary type rejection pattern. These results show that PE present during the onset of immunization can promote the activation of regulatory agents such as enhancing antibodies and suppressor cells favoring allograft survival.