Delayed-type hypersensitivity to rabies virus in mice: Assay of active or passive sensitization by the footpad test

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Abstract

With a purified beta-propiolactone-inactivated rabies virus, a significant increase in footpad swelling was elicited in normal or in BCG-pretreated mice after immunization with varying doses of rabies vaccine. These footpad reactions were shown to peak at 24 h and to be associated with an infiltration of newly formed blood monocytes demonstrated by histology and [125I]deoxyuridine labeling. A relationship between the lymphoproliferation and the degree of sensitization is described, and the susceptibility to cyclophosphamide treatment is also examined. Adoptive transfer of specific reactivity to normal recipient mice with immune lymphoid cells, but not with immune serum, was demonstrated, and the results represent another argument for a cell-mediated immunological mechanism.

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Lagrange, P. H., Tsiang, H., Hurtrel, B., & Ravisse, P. (1978). Delayed-type hypersensitivity to rabies virus in mice: Assay of active or passive sensitization by the footpad test. Infection and Immunity, 21(3), 931–939. https://doi.org/10.1128/iai.21.3.931-939.1978

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