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Infect Immun. 1973 January; 7(1): 68-75
Copyright © 1973 American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

Migration Inhibitory Factor and Interferon in the Circulation of Mice with Delayed Hypersensitivity

S. B. Salvin, J. S. Youngner and W. H. Lederer

1 Department of Microbiology, School of Medicine, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15213

ABSTRACT

When mice infected with Mycobacterium tuberculosis strain BCG were inoculated intravenously with old tuberculin (OT) or living BCG cells, both migration inhibitory factor (MIF) and interferon appeared in the circulation within a few hours. In such animals, which showed delayed hypersensitivity by footpad tests, as little as 1.5 mg of OT or as few as 1.7 x 106 bacteria per mouse were capable of eliciting circulating MIF and interferon. Uninfected animals inoculated with large doses of OT or living BCG cells did not produce MIF or interferon. When nonspecific stimuli such as bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS; from Salmonella typhimurium strain LT-2), heat-killed Brucella abortus, Newcastle disease virus (NDV), and polyinosinic acid:polycytidilic acid (poly I:C) were inoculated intravenously into BCG-infected mice, MIF was produced in the circulation of animals challenged with LPS or Brucella but not in those challenged with NDV or poly I:C, although all the stimuli were capable of eliciting an interferon response. The interferon elicited in BCG-infected mice by specific antigen differed in at least one important property from the viral inhibitor produced by the nonspecific stimuli. The interferon which appeared after injection of OT or living BCG cells was destroyed by treatment at pH 2 for 24 hr at 4C, whereas the interferons produced after injection of the nonspecific stimuli were stable under the same conditions. The MIF activity in plasma from sensitized mice inoculated with specific antigen was also destroyed by treatment at pH 2. When mouse plasma containing both MIF and interferon activity was filtered through Sephadex G-100, both mediators were excluded in the same peak fractions. Sensitization of mice with complete Freund adjuvant instead of infection with BCG cells produces a different pattern of response. Although hypersensitive to specific antigen by footpad swelling tests, mice sensitized with complete Freund adjuvant failed to produce MIF or interferon when they were inoculated intravenously with OT or living BCG cells.


Infect Immun. 1973 January; 7(1): 68-75
Copyright © 1973 American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.




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