Abstract
Contact sensitivity to dinitrochlorobenzene (DNCB) in guinea pigs could be rapidly suppressed by intravenous injection of dinitrobenzene sulfonic acid sodium salt (DNBSO3). This suppression is transient and antigen-specific. Macrophages from desensitized animals are not inactivated as shown by their ability to react, both in vivo and in vitro to lymphokines produced in a separate system. Therefore, effector lymphocytes are considered the target for the desensitizing antigen. Using an adoptive transfer system it was demonstrated that effector lymphocytes are inactivated by a direct effect of the hapten. Since this inactivation can be reversed by trypsin treatment, a receptor blockade of effector lymphocytes is proposed as the mechanism of desensitization of DNCB-contact sensitive guinea pigs. This does not exclude the possibility that additional mechanisms such as suppressor cells, compartmentalization or endogenous proliferation of lymph node lymphocytes may play an additional role.
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