Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UNIPROT:P30536 (
PBS
)
9,886
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The engraftment of human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (Hu-PBMC) from adult donors in scid mice has been published by MOSIER et al. in 1988. The possibility to obtain a secondary human immune response in human-scid mice has also been reported but attempts to induce a primary human immune response still remain difficult to achieve. In this work, an antigen (Canine albumin) or a hapten (DNP) was coupled with tetanus toxoid, an antigenic protein against which our human donors already had memory T cells through vaccination. In this way, hu-scid mice immunized with coupled DNP-tetanus toxoid (TT-DNP) or coupled Canine albumin-
Tetanus toxoid
(Calb-TT) mounted a specific human immune response anti-DNP or anti-Canine albumin (Calb) respectively. A secondary human immune response anti-tetanus toxoid was also detected in the sera of hu-scid mice immunized with product containing TT but not in the sera of those injected with
PBS
alone. The scid mice grafted with Hu-PBMC from a TT naive donor and challenged with Calb-TT or Calb alone failed to produce specific anti-Calb antibodies. These observations demonstrate that memory T cells can give a substantial help to naive B cells which interact with them for obvious B cell activation and differentiation into plasma cells. This model of immunization might be useful for other antigens of choice, allowing the production of human monoclonal antibodies, in combination with a suitable system of immortalization. Attempts to immunize human cells in scid mice against DNP coupled to LO-BM2 (a rat monoclonal antibody anti-human IgM) failed to induce a specific human response either anti-rat immunoglobulins (Igs), or anti-DNP and led to a decrease of human Ig production in hu-scid. We also immunized hu-scid mice against ovalbumin alone but, only in some cases, a low specific human immune response was observed, so this system seems to be unreliable.
...
PMID:A promising model of primary human immunization in human-scid mouse. 887 9
Groups of neonatal mice were immunised with different mucosal vaccines based on acellular (Pertactin antigen) or whole cell (inactivated Bordetella pertussis with Diphtheria and
Tetanus toxoid
) Pertussis vaccines, using Escherichia coli heat-labile enterotoxin (LT) as a mucosal adjuvant. Neonatal mice tolerated mucosal vaccination well and a significant cellular infiltrate was detected in the lungs of mice receiving mucosal vaccines compared to
PBS
controls. This infiltrate included B lymphocytes, gammadelta T cells and interferon-gamma producing T cells. Neonatal mice, in contrast to adult mice, responded poorly in terms of the production of serum antibody to Pertussis antigens delivered mucosally, although they were able to mount an anti-Tetanus response to those vaccines harbouring
Tetanus toxoid
and whole cell Pertussis antigen. Neonatal mice immunised with Pertactin or whole cell Pertussis antigen together with LT were protected against virulent B. pertussis challenge.
...
PMID:Mucosal immunisation of murine neonates using whole cell and acellular Pertussis vaccines. 1531 38