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Current Microbiology, Vol.22, No.4, 265-269, 1991
HUMORAL IMMUNITY INDUCED IN THE LOWER RESPIRATORY-TRACT BY LOCAL IMMUNIZATION WITH A TEMPERATURE-SENSITIVE MUTANT OF PSEUDOMONAS-AERUGINOSA
The nature of the humoral immune mechanisms involved in the protection induced after local immunization with a temperature-sensitive (ts) mutant of Pseudomonas aeruginosa was investigated. We had previously shown that intranasal (i.n.) immunization of granulocytopenic mice protected the animals from lethal pulmonary challenge with P. aeruginosa, whereas mice immunized intraperitoneally were unprotected. Intranasal immunization induced high levels of anti-P. aeruginosa IgG and IgA in the lower respiratory tract, whereas only modest levels of IgG (and no IgA) could be detected in lung lavage fluids from mice immunized by the intraperitoneal (i.p.) route with ts mutant E/9/9. Plasma anti-P aeruginosa IgG levels after i.n. immunization were lower than those observed after i.p. immunization with similar doses of the ts mutant. The main contribution to the protection induced when mice are immunized intranasally appears to be from IgA in the pulmonary secretions, although other immune mechanisms cannot be discounted.