The immune response of cattle and pigs to a vaccinia recombinant virus containing the fusion (F) protein gene of rinderpest virus was examined. Half the cattle and all the pigs gave humoral response to primary vaccination and all the cattle gave an anamnestic response to a second vaccination 28 days after the primary vaccination. All the cattle after a single or secondary vaccination were completely protected clinically after exposure to a lethal dose of the Saudi 1/81 strain of virus. Prior vaccination with another TK- vaccinia recombinant (VVCAT) suppressed, but did not abrogate, the immune response to the rinderpest F recombinant. The pigs gave a humoral immune response in the absence of any local reaction at the site of vaccination.
The response of peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) to the antigen tetanus toxoid (TT) in patients with chronic renal failure being maintained on hemodialysis was examined. We have found that: (1) the response of patients’ unfractionated PBL to TT is markedly suppressed when compared to the response of control PBL; (2) the response of patients’ purified T cells and T4+ cells to TT co-cultured with 5% autologous monocytes is suppressed when compared to the response of comparable control cultures; (3) the response of patients’ purified T lymphocytes co-cultured with 5 % autologous monocytes is significantly enhanced over the response of patients’ unfractionated PBL, and (4) the suppressed proliferation of patients’ PBL to TT is not reversed by hemodialysis. Thus, the presence of suppressor monocytes and the inability of the responding T cells and accessory monocytes to react to antigen contribute to the suppressed antigen-specific T cell proliferation observed in chronic renal failure patients. These results are relevant to the suppressed cell-mediated immunity observed in uremia.
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