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Increased adjuvant efficacy in stinulation of antibody responses after macrophage elimination in vivo
To investigate whether macrophages influence the efficacy of adjuvants, we locally eliminated lymph node macrophages with dichloromethylene diphosphonate containing liposomes before primary immunization. After macrophage elimination, animals were immunized with a soluble antigen (TNP-KLH; 2,4,6-trinitrophenyl-keyhole limpet haemocyanin) either in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS), in complete Freund's adjuvant (CFA), or in Specol. Specol is a water-in-oil emulsion, considered to be less aggressive than CFA, but equally effective. A secondary immunization followed with TNP-KLH. In vivo macrophage elimination before Specol/TNP-KLH immunization resulted in increased adjuvant efficacy as measured by (primary) antibody responses. This suggests that the activity of Specol is not primarily mediated through macrophages but rather through other antigen-presenting cell types (e.g. dendritic cells, B cells, fibroblasts). The overall duality of produced antibodies, in terms of isotype distribution and affinity maturation, remained the same. After primary injection, CFA/TNP-KLH immunization resulted in significantly higher antibody responses in macrophage-depleted animals and antibody responses did not increase significantly after secondary immunization However, a booster effect was found when macrophages were not eliminated before CFA/TNP-KLH immunization, suggesting that the presence of macrophages during the first weeks of the primary immune response is essential for the induction of an effective secondary response in CFA immunizations. In conclusion, macrophage depletion before immunization with a soluble T-cell-dependent antigen combined with Specol may enhance specific antibody responses without changing the isotype or affinity of the antibodies.
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[Abstract]
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Immune responses and side effects of five different oil-based adjuvants in mice
In this study, five different oil based adjuvants were compared to assess efficacy and side effects. Mice were injected subcutaneously (s.c.) or intraperitoneally (i.p.) with a weak immunogen (synthetic peptide) emulsified in Freund's adjuvant (FA), Specol, RIBI, TiterMax or Montanide ISA50. Efficacy of adjuvants was evaluated based on their properties to induce peptide specific IgGl, IgG2a and total lgG antibodies, native protein cross- reactive antibodies and cytokine production. Side effects were evaluated based on clinical and behavioural abnormalities, and (histo)pathological changes. Although marked differences in isotype profile and height of titre are observed among the different adjuvants used, we found that FA, Montanide ISA50 and Specol worked equally well in the s.c. and i.p. route, TiterMax functioned only when given i.p. and RIBI also did not perform up to par. The number of cytokine (interferon-gamma and interleukin-4) producing spleen cells was significantly higher after injection of RIBI compared with other adjuvants. Injection of FA or TiterMax resulted in severe pathological changes while after RIBI injection minimal changes were observed. In conclusion, high peptide specific antibody levels with limited side effects can be obtained by s.c. injection of peptide combined with Montanide ISA50 or Specol as alternatives to FA.
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[Abstract]
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Effect of extraction and assay media on analysis of airborne endotoxin
The measurement of airborne endotoxins is thus far not standardized. Earlier studies reported higher endotoxin yields when Tween 20 was added to the media used for filter extraction and in the Limulus amebocyte lysate (LAL) assay. This study compared four common media and assessed the effects of Tween during extraction and analysis separately. Parallel airborne dust samples from five work environments (n = 250) were used to compare the four media (pyrogen-free water [PFW], PFW-Tween 20, PFW-Tris, and PFW-triethyl-amine- phosphate [TAP]) and an extraction time of 10 or 60 min. A subset of the extracts in PFW or PFW-Tween (n = 40) were analyzed in parallel LAL assays with PFW or PFW-Tween as the assay medium. The results produced by a shorter extraction time or the presence of Tris were similar to the results for the reference procedure (PFW and 60 min of shaking). The use of PFW-TAP showed overall lower yields and a deviant calibration curve. The presence of Tween in the extraction medium resulted in significantly (P < 0.05) higher endotoxin yields from all dust types, independent of the effect of Tween in the assay. Tween in the LAL assay, however, also strongly inhibited the reactivity of the lipopolysaccharide (LPS) standard, thus shifting the calibration curve to higher values. The inhibition of LPS in test samples was less pronounced and varied between dust sources, resulting in enhanced calculated concentrations. This assay effect could be circumvented by diluting extracts at least 50-fold before the LAL assay. In conclusion, of the media tested, only Tween enhances the efficiency of endotoxin extraction from airborne dust samples in a consistent manner. We recommend extraction in PFW-Tween combined with dilution and LAL analysis in PFW. Copyright © 2008, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved. Chemicals / CAS: polysorbate 20, 12244-25-6, 9005-64-5; triethylamine, 121-44-8; water, 7732-18-5; Culture Media; Endotoxins; Ethylamines; Polysorbates; triethylamine, 121-44-8; Tromethamine, 77-86-1
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[PDF]
[Abstract]
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