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1.
Braz. j. med. biol. res ; 39(12): 1581-1586, Dec. 2006. ilus
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-439688

ABSTRACT

Most contacts with food protein and microbiota antigens occur at the level of the gut mucosa. In animal models where this natural stimulation is absent, such as germ-free and antigen-free mice, the gut-associated lymphoid tissue (GALT) and systemic immunological activities are underdeveloped. We have shown that food proteins play a critical role in the full development of the immune system. C57BL/6 mice weaned to a diet in which intact proteins are replaced by equivalent amounts of amino acids (Aa diet) have a poorly developed GALT as well as low levels of serum immunoglobulins (total Ig, IgG, and IgA, but not IgM). In the present study, we evaluated whether the introduction of a protein-containing diet in 10 adult Aa-fed C57BL/6 mice could restore their immunoglobulin levels and whether this recovery was dependent on the amount of dietary protein. After the introduction of a casein-containing diet, Aa-fed mice presented a fast recovery (after 7 days) of secretory IgA (from 0.33 to 0.75 mg/mL, while in casein-fed mice this value was 0.81 mg/mL) and serum immunoglobulin levels (from 5.39 to 10.25 mg/mL of total Ig). Five percent dietary casein was enough to promote the restoration of secretory IgA and serum immunoglobulin levels to a normal range after 30 days feeding casein diet (as in casein-fed mice - 15 percent by weight of diet). These data suggest that the defect detected in the immunoglobulin levels was a reversible result of the absence of food proteins as an antigenic stimulus. They also indicate that the deleterious consequences of malnutrition at an early age for some immune functions may be restored by therapeutic intervention later in life.


Subject(s)
Animals , Female , Mice , Dietary Supplements , Dietary Proteins/immunology , Immunoglobulin Isotypes/biosynthesis , Caseins/administration & dosage , Diet, Protein-Restricted , Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay , Immunoglobulin Isotypes/blood , Time Factors
2.
Braz. j. med. biol. res ; 36(1): 13-22, Jan. 2003.
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-326312

ABSTRACT

Current immunological opinion disdains the necessity to define global interconnections between lymphocytes and regards natural autoantibodies and autoreactive T cells as intrinsically pathogenic. Immunological theories address the recognition of foreignness by independent clones of lymphocytes, not the relations among lymphocytes or between lymphocytes and the organism. However, although extremely variable in cellular/molecular composition, the immune system preserves as invariant a set of essential relations among its components and constantly enacts contacts with the organism of which it is a component. These invariant relations are reflected, for example, in the life-long stability of profiles of reactivity of immunoglobulins formed by normal organisms (natural antibodies). Oral contacts with dietary proteins and the intestinal microbiota also result in steady states that lack the progressive quality of secondary-type reactivity. Autoreactivity (natural autoantibody and autoreactive T cell formation) is also stable and lacks the progressive quality of clonal expansion. Specific immune responses, currently regarded as the fundament of the operation of the immune system, may actually result from transient interruptions in this stable connectivity among lymphocytes. More permanent deficits in interconnectivity result in oligoclonal expansions of T lymphocytes, as seen in Omenn's syndrome and in the experimental transplantation of a suboptimal diversity of syngeneic T cells to immunodeficient hosts, which also have pathogenic consequences. Contrary to theories that forbid autoreactivity as potentially pathogenic, the physiology of the immune system is conservative and autoreactive. Pathology derives from failures of these conservative mechanisms


Subject(s)
Animals , Humans , Immune System , Antigen-Antibody Reactions , Autoantibodies , Autoantigens , Immune System , Models, Immunological , T-Lymphocytes
3.
Braz. j. med. biol. res ; 31(1): 35-48, Jan. 1998. tab, graf
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-212539

ABSTRACT

In the present review we address oral tolerance as an important biological phenomenon and discuss how it is affected by aging. Other factors such as frequency of feeding and previous digestion of the antigen also seem to influence the establishment of oral tolerance. We also analyze immunoglobulin isotypes of specific antibodies formed by tolerant and immunized animals of different ages submitted to different conditions of oral antigen administration. Isotypic patterns were studied as a parameter for assessing the pathways of B and T cell interactions leading to antibody production.


Subject(s)
Mice , Animals , Aging/immunology , Diet , Immune Tolerance/immunology , Immunoglobulin Isotypes/analysis , Aging/physiology , Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay , Immune Tolerance/physiology , Mucous Membrane
4.
Braz. j. med. biol. res ; 25(8): 813-21, 1992. ilus
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-113574

ABSTRACT

Seven-week old B6D2F1 mice were highly susceptible to the induction of oral tolerance to ovalbumin (Ova), whereas 70-week old mice were totally refractory. Immune responsiveness (secondary antibody formation) to intraperitoneal immunization to Ova was the same in 7-week or 70-week old B6D2F1 mice. In B6D2F1 mice, the adoptive transfer of spleen cells from old donors into young recipients hindered, and, reciprocally, transfer of spleen cells from young donors into old recipients facilitated the induction of oral tolerance. In BALB/c mice, which are refractory to oral tolerance to Ova, the adoptive transfer of spleen cellsfrom neonate or young donors into old recipients failed to modify the lack of susceptibility to the induction of oral tolerance


Subject(s)
Mice , Age Factors , Immune Tolerance , Immunotherapy, Adoptive , Ovalbumin , Spleen/cytology
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