Affiliation:
1. James A. Baker Institute for Animal Health, College of Veterinary Medicine, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853
Abstract
AbstractMaternal immune recognition of the developing conceptus in equine pregnancy is characterized by the strongest and most consistent alloantibody response described in any species, a response directed almost exclusively against paternal MHC class I Ags. This work investigated the cellular immune response to paternal MHC Ags in pregnant and nonpregnant horses and donkeys, and in horses carrying interspecies hybrid mule conceptuses. We observed profound decreases in classical, MHC-restricted, CTL activity to allogeneic paternal cells in peripheral blood lymphocytes from both horse mares and donkey jennets carrying intraspecies pregnancies, compared with cells from nonpregnant controls. This is the first evidence in a randomly bred species for a generalized systemic shift of immune reactivity away from cellular and toward humoral immunity during pregnancy. Surprisingly, mares carrying interspecies hybrid mule conceptuses did not exhibit this transient, pregnancy-associated decrease in CTL activity. The failure of interspecies pregnancy to down-regulate cellular immune responses may be a heretofore-unrecognized, subtle barrier to reproductive success between species.
Publisher
The American Association of Immunologists
Subject
Immunology,Immunology and Allergy
Reference36 articles.
1. Medawar, P. B.. 1954. Some immunological and endocrinological problems raised by the evolution of viviparity in vertebrates. Symp. Soc. Exp. Biol. 7: 320
2. Tafuri, A., J. Alferink, P. Möller, G. J. Hämmerling, B. Arnold. 1995. T cell awareness of paternal alloantigens during pregnancy. Science 270: 630
3. Roberston, S. A., V. J. Mau, S. N. Hudson, K. P. Tremellen. 1997. Cytokine-leukocyte networks and the establishment of pregnancy. Am. J. Reprod. Immunol. 37: 438
4. Jiang, S. P., M. S. Vacchio. 1998. Multiple mechanisms of peripheral T cell tolerance to the fetal “allograft”. J. Immunol. 160: 3086
5. Simpson, E.. 1996. Immunology: why the baby isn’t thrown out. Curr. Biol. 6: 43