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Detection of intestinal flora-derived bacterial antigen complexes in splenic macrophages of rats

J Kool, H De Visser, MY Gerrits-Boeye, IS Klasen, MJ Melief, CG Van Helden- Meeuwsen, LM Van Lieshout, JG Ruseler-Van Embden, WB Van den Berg and GM Bahr

Department of Immunology, Erasmus University Rotterdam, The Netherlands.

We studied the presence of bacterial antigens in rat tissues. We produced a monoclonal antibody (MAb 2E9) directed against intestinal flora-derived peptidoglycan-polysaccharide complexes from human and rat feces. With several immunological techniques, the specificity of 2E9 for this bacterial product was demonstrated. Using 2E9 in an immunohistological assay, we were able to show the presence of bacterial products in macrophages in the red pulp of spleens of conventional Lewis rats. However, we found no correlation between the development of the intestinal flora and positive spleen staining with MAb 2E9. The results were confirmed by immunohistology with a previously described MAb 2-4 directed to muramyl dipeptide. Other lymphoid organs did not stain positively with 2E9 and 2-4. Neonatal and young rats showed no staining of the spleen, but positivity could be induced by injecting peptidoglycan-polysaccharide complexes systemically. We conclude that bacterial fragments are present in splenic macrophages of conventional rats.

Volume 42, Issue 11, pp. 1435-1441, 11/01/1994
Copyright © 1994 by The Histochemical Society


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