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Query: UNIPROT:P43026 (lipopolysaccharide)
62,215 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

This paper deals with the behavior of adult mouse bone marrow cells placed in tissue culture with or without antigen, and subsequently assessed for immune competence after adoptive transfer into lethally X-irradiated, syngeneic hosts. Attention was focussed on B lymphocytes through using hapten human gamma globulin (HGG) preparations as putative tolerogens in tissue culture, the T-cell-independent antigens DNP-POL and NIP-POL as challenge injections in adoptive hosts, and numbers of hapten-specific PFC in host spleens for the quantitation of immune competence. It was found that the capacity of bone marrow cells to mount an adoptive immune response rose by a factor of about fivefold over 3 days in tissue culture. This rise was completely abolished by the presence in the culture of hapten-HGG conjugates with about one mole of hapten per carrier molecule. The prevention of the emergence of immune competence amongst maturing B cells was termed clonal abortion tolerogenesis. Dose-response studies showed the lowest effective antigen concentration to be between 2.5 times 10- minus 10 and 2.5 times 10- minus 9 M, and a standard concentration of 2.5 times 10- minus 8 M was chosen as producing near maximal effects. The tolerance was antigen-specific and time-dependent, being maximal only when antigen was present continuously as the cultured cells was maturing. It did not depend on the presence of T lymphocytes in marrow, and was not of an "infectious" type. In contrast to tolerogenesis of mature B lymphocytes by high antigen concentrations, it could not be abolished by lipopolysaccharide. We speculate that clonal abortion may be a tolerance mechanism of great physiological significance for self-recognition, and discuss the results in the framework of other recent tolerance models, including those involving receptor blockade and suppressor T cells.
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PMID:Evidence for the clonal abortion theory of B-lymphocyte tolerance. 4 89

Human peripheral blood phagocytes ingest Escherichia coli 026:B6 lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-coated paraffin oil droplets containing Oil red O only if fresh serum deposits C3 on the surfaces of the particles (opsonizes them), by reactions involving the properdin system. The rate of binding of purified [125-I]C3 in serum to LPS-coated particles correlated precisely with the rate of acquisition of ingestibility assayed spectrophotometrically. Once opsonized, LPS-coated particles remained fully ingestible and retained fixed [125-I]C3 radioactivity even after exposure to extremes of temperature, pH, ionic strength, phospholipases, urea or guanidine, some nonionic and ionic detergents, and organic solvents. Trypsin, human conglutinogen-activating factor, another heat-stable activity found in human serum, and sodium dodecyl sulfate removed radioactivity and diminished ingestibility of the opsonized particles. Alkylation, reduction plus alkylation and F(ab')2 from anti-C3 blocked ingestibility but did not alter particle-bound radioactivitymelectrophoretic and tryptic peptide autoradiographic analysis of dodecyl sulfate eluates of opsonized particles, cleansed of many contaminating proteins by boiling with 2 M NaCl (yet still opsonized), revealed that the polypeptide with C3-derived radioactivity had a mol wt of approximately 140,000 and was composed of 70,000 mol wt subunits linked by disulfide bonds. Immunochemical analysis and comparison of the peptide structure of the eluate with that of C3 indicated that the opsonic fragment is not the fragment defined as C3b but a smaller derivative of C3.
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PMID:The opsonic fragment of the third component of human complement (C3). 23 57

The in vivo antibody response to the lysozyme component of a lysozyme-lipopolysaccharide complex has been investigated in normal, thymectomized and nude mice. The splenic PFC response elicited by the complex in CBA mice is 10- to 20-fold higher than the response elicited by lysozyme admixed with LPS. Both lysozyme-LPS complexes and lysozyme + LPS mixtures prime mice for a subsequent secondary anti-lysozyme response. In contrast, thymectomized mice responded poorly to lysozyme-LPS complexes unless reconstituted with splenic T cells. However, nude mice responded as well as Nu/+ controls to the complex. The PFC response of normal and of nude mice was severely depressed by treatment with anti-lymphocyte serum. These findings suggest that T lymphocytes contribute significantly to the enhanced immune responsiveness associated with LPS administration.
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PMID:Immunologic properties of protein-lipopolysaccharide complexes. I. Antibody response of normal, thymectomized, and nude mice to a lysozyme-lipopolysaccharide complex. 30 94

In addition to the x-linked B cell maturation deficit previously reported in CBA/N mice, a functional T cell defect has now been observed. T lymphocyte regulation of the polyclonal PFC response was studied within the context of this x-linked immunodeficiency model. The ability of 1) B cells from (CBA X CBA/CaJ)F1, male mice to respond to nonspecific T cell helper signals and 2) T cells from NCF1 male mice to provide such signals was investigated under in vitro conditions by using bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) as the polyclonal activator. B lymphocytes from both male and female NCF1 mice were receptive to T cell help rendered by NCF1 female T cells. Male T cells. however, were unable to augment polyclonal B cell responses of either NCF1 male or female B cells to LPS. Treatment with ATS + C reduced the polyclonal response of female but not male spleen cells to LPS. This deficit could not be overcome by the use of greater numbers of NCF1 male T cells. The observation that this deficiency in T cell regulation is not due to active suppression suggests that the results may be attributable to an intrinsic T cell defect.
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PMID:T cell regulation of polyclonal B cell responsiveness. II. Evidence for a deficit in T cell function in mice with an X-linked B lymphocyte defect. 31 24

Ten adult human volunteers were immunized with Salmonella typhi and their peripheral blood leukocytes were collected for 14 days after immunization. These peripheral blood leukocyted, rich in lymphocytes, were plaqued in a modified Jerne assay against sheep erythrocytes coated with either Salmonella or Escherichia lipopolysaccharide. A specific direct and indirect PFC response developed in immunized individuals by day 7 and peaked at day 10. This vigorous PFC response rapidly declined to normal levels by day 14. This marked and specific PFC response of human peripheral blood leukocytes may be developed as a useful tool for monitoring the humoral immune response of patients with Gram-negative bacterial infections.
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PMID:Detection of plaque-forming cells in the peripheral blood of actively immunized humans. 32 92

Immunization of mice with sheep red blood cells (SRBC) or Escherichia coli lipopolysaccharide (LPS) induces the appearance of B memory cells in the thymus. In this paper the origin of these B memory cells was investigated. Therefore, mice primed with either SRBC or LPS 6 months previously and nonprimed mice were joined for parabiosis. Four weeks later the parabiotic mice were separated from each other. Another 3 weeks later thymus cells from the primed and nonprimed mice were transferred separately into lethally irradiated mice in order to determine the adoptive PFC response. It was found that the 4-week period of parabiosis could account for the appearance of a distinct population of B memory cells in the thymus of the nonprimed mice. This result suggest that the B memory cells which appear in the thymus belong to the pool of potentially circulating memory cells.
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PMID:B memory cells in the thymus: part of the pool of potentially circulating memory cells. 33 72

By employing primary cultures of purified spleen cells from lipopolysaccharide (LPS) responder (C3H/HeN or C57BL/10Sn) or nonresponder (C3H/HeJ or C57BL/10ScN) mice incubated with particulate antigen and LPS prepared by phenol-water extraction (Ph), we have presented evidence that both T cells and macrophages (MO) are required for LPS-induced adjuvanticity. First, MO derived from C3H/HeN spleen cells, when mixed with responder, C3H/HeN lymphocytes and Ph-LPS, elicited enhanced antibody responses to sheep erythrocytes (SRC) antigen, whereas lymphocytes from the nonresponder, C3H/HeJ mouse strain did not evoke this response. Similarly, purified T cells from C3H/HeN spleens, when cultured with responder, nu/nu spleen cells, and Ph-LPS yielded enhanced anti-TNP PFC responses; whereas, C3H/HeJ T cells did not potentiate immune responses when mixed with optimal concentrations of Ph-LPS. LPS prepared by butanol-water extraction elicited significant adjuvant effects with all cell combinations. Finally, purified responder T cells and MO enabled either responder or nonresponder B cells to elicit LPS potentiation. These data indicate that T cells and MO are controlling LPS-induced augmentation of B-cell responses.
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PMID:Cellular requirements for lipopolysaccharide adjuvanticity. A role for both T lymphocytes and macrophages for in vitro responses to particulate antigens. 37 82

The effects of inhibitors of cell division on polyclonal stimulation induced either by bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) or by a synthetic adjuvant, MDP, were compared, using different target cells. Doses of colchicine that prevented 3H-thymidine incorporation also prevented the induction of antibodies against TNP and against an altered self antigen: bromelain-treated mouse red blood cells (br-MRBC). Under identical conditions, incubation with cytosine arabinoside (CA) strongly prevented the induction of anti-TNP PFC and to a lesser degree anti-SRBC PFC. However, the number of anti br-MRBC PFC was unchanged even when a dose of CA which inhibits totally the incorporation of 3H-thymidine was used. Our findings indicate that the general term "polyclonal stimulation" may concern at least two different types of cell populations and therefore we strongly stress the importance of choosing similar targets in comparative experiments.
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PMID:Effect of cell division inhibitors on polyclonal activation can vary according to the target cell used. 39 5

Trypsin, a neutral protease, enhanced the direct plaque response of T cell-suffiecient mouse spleen cell cultures to sheep erythrocytes (SRBC) and significantly increased the number of spontaneous PFC against SRBC in cultures without antigen. Moreover, trypsin proved to be able to substitute for T cells in nu/nu spleen cell cultures stimulated with SRBC. Its restorative capacity in this type of response was comparable to the one of lipopolysaccharide. Restoration of antibody synthesis in T cell-deprived cultures could not be explained by enzymatic alteration of SRBC. The data are discussed in terms of a possible role of hydrolytic enzymes released by accessory cells during the induction of an antibody response.
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PMID:Trypsin increases in vitro antibody synthesis and substitutes for helper T cells. 77 82

The effect of endotoxin or lipopolysaccharide (LPS) on tolerance induction in bone marrow-derived lymphoid cells (B cells) was investigated. Dinitrophenylated amino acid copolymer-L-(glutamic acid, lysine) (DNP-GL) acts as a potent tolerogen on normal and DNP-primed B cells. LPS significantly enhanced the anti-sheep red blood cell plaque-forming cell (anti-SRBC PFC) response that occurred after the immunization with a low dose of SRBC. LPS did not induce the primary anti-DNP PFC response after the injection of DNP-GL, nor did it prevent the tolerance induction in normal and DNP-primed B cells that occured after the administration of DNP-GL.
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PMID:Ineffectiveness of lipopolysaccharide for preventing the tolerance induction in bone marrow-derived lymphoid cells with dinitrophenyl-poly-L-(glutamic acid, lysine). 79 34


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