We have used diffusion-weighted 1H NMR micro-imaging and localized spectroscopy techniques to monitor the growth and distribution of mammalian cells in a hollow-fiber bioreactor. Non-invasive NMR measurements of this type should also allow investigation of metabolic heterogeneity and assist in future designs of hollow-fiber systems.
Mucosal antigen encounter usually results in a state of systemic non-responsiveness (tolerance). This failure to mount a protective response is a major hurdle to mucosal vaccine development. Hence, the identification of safe and effective mucosal adjuvants promoting protective immunity is of critical importance. The non-toxic B subunit of Escherichia coli heat labile enterotoxin (EtxB) is a potent nasal adjuvant; however, its usefulness following oral delivery is unconfirmed. We used DO11.10 chimeric mice to assess whether EtxB could abrogate tolerance to oral OVA. We show that admixing EtxB with OVA for oral immunization abrogates oral tolerance and results in a weak anti-OVA immune response. Importantly, EtxB profoundly modulated the nature of the response to subsequent parenteral challenge, promoting IgG1 in favor of IgG2a antibodies and depressing IFN-+ production while elevating TGF-g secretion. The addition of EtxB promoted T cell division, as assessed by loss of staining with carboxyfluorescein diacetate succinimidyl ester. Enhanced cell division promoted by EtxB was associated with T cell differentiation (increased numbers of CD45RB low cells) in vivo, although dividing OVA-specific T cells were CD25-. These data suggest that although EtxB is a weak oral adjuvant, it can profoundly modulate the nature of the immune response to admixed antigen.
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