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Publication : Enhanced oral tolerance in transgenic mice with hepatocyte secretion of IL-10.

First Author  Safadi R Year  2005
Journal  J Immunol Volume  175
Issue  6 Pages  3577-83
PubMed ID  16148101 Mgi Jnum  J:116723
Mgi Id  MGI:3694869 Doi  10.4049/jimmunol.175.6.3577
Citation  Safadi R, et al. (2005) Enhanced oral tolerance in transgenic mice with hepatocyte secretion of IL-10. J Immunol 175(6):3577-83
abstractText  Several cytokines derived from Th3 and Tr1 cells, including IL-10, are believed to regulate oral tolerance, but direct evidence is lacking. We have explored the potential role of IL-10 by generating transgenic (TG) mice with sustained hepatocyte-specific expression of rat IL-10. TG mice expressed rat IL-10 downstream of a transthyretin promoter, which led to serum levels that were increased 10- to 100-fold compared with normal animals. Animals were orally administered 1 mg of whole OVA for 5 consecutive days, with control animals receiving PBS. There were six animal groups: Either OVA or PBS were fed orally to rat IL-10 TG mice, non-TG wild-type mice without IL-10 administration, and non-TG wild-type mice administered rat IL-10 systemically. On day 8, all mice were immunized with two injections of OVA, and then analyzed on day 18. T cell proliferation responses were reduced by 65.8 +/- 14.3% after feeding of OVA in rIL-10 TG animals, compared with 39.4 +/- 15.6% in the non-TG mice (p = 0.02). Anti-OVA titers were expressed as fold increase over naive non-TG mice. After feeding, titers decreased by approximately 33% (from 3- to 2-fold) in TG animals and, to a lesser extent, in non-TG animals. IFN-gamma secretion by cultured popliteal lymphocytes decreased in TG animals by 83% after feeding and by 69% in non-TG animals. IL-4 secretion increased 4-fold in TG-fed mice, but did not significantly change in non-TG OVA-fed animals. In contrast to hepatic TG expression of rIL-10, systemic administration of rIL-10 had only a modest effect on tolerance. IL-10, when transgenically expressed in the liver enhances mucosal tolerance to an oral Ag.
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