Although as pretreatment oral tolerance is a potent means to achieve systemic suppression, its application in ongoing disease is controversial. Here we propose that availability of naive T cells may critically determine whether immunological tolerance is achieved during ongoing antigenic reactivity. Infusion of naive antigen-specific T cells into mice directly prior to eliciting a secondary Th2 response induces these naive cells to actively engage in the antigenic response despite presence of established memory. Naive antigen-specific T-cells divided faster, produced more interleukin (IL)-2, IL-4 and IL-5 and enhanced immunoglobulin E (IgE) release during a secondary T h2 response, compared with naive T cells that were infused prior to a primary response. Despite such contribution by new cohorts of naive T cells co-infusion of mucosal Tr together with naive T cells could suppress enhanced IgE release during a secondary Th2 response. We conclude that naive T cells contribute to a secondary Th2 response and although they can still be suppressed in the presence of sufficient numbers of mucosal Tr, they may interfere with potential therapeutic application of mucosal tolerance. Copyright

, , , ,
doi.org/10.1111/j.1398-9995.2005.00925.x, hdl.handle.net/1765/74192
Allergy
Department of Immunology

Broere, F., Unger, W., van Berkel, L., Garssen, J., Hoijer, M., Kraal, G., & Samsom, J. (2005). New cohorts of naive T cells exacerbate ongoing allergy but can be suppressed by regulatory T cells. Allergy, 60(12), 1530–1536. doi:10.1111/j.1398-9995.2005.00925.x