Abstract: | We investigated the ability of staphylococcal enterotoxin B (SEB) to modify the immediate hypersensitivity response induced in BALB/c mice following sensitization to ovalbumin (OVA), a response mediated by OVA-reactive Vβ8 T cells. Mice were sensitized by skin painting with OVA every second day over a period of 2 weeks. SEB, a potent activator of Vβ8+ T cells, was administered at the same site where OVA was applied (skin of the lower abdomen) following two different protocols. In protocol (A) SEB was injected intradermally 1 day before painting with OVA and on day 7; in protocol B, SEB was injected each time OVA was applied to the skin (eight times). SEB (but not SEA) altered the development of immediate hypersensitivity to OVA, as demonstrated by the reduction in allergen-specific IgE, decreased OVA-specific immediate skin test responsiveness, and prevented the development of increased airways responsiveness after bronchial challenge with OVA. Injections of SEB did not alter the proliferative responses of local draining lymph node cells or spleen mononuclear cells to OVA, indicating that administration of SEB did not inhibit the sensitization to OVA, but shifted the immune response away from an immediate type response (IgE/IgG1) to IgG2a, IgG2b and IgG3. Although both protocols of SEB treatment did not lead to a major deletion of the Vβ8 T cell population, they did reduce the proliferative response of Vβ8+ T cells to OVA. These data indicate that the bacterial toxin SEB is capable of modifying the immediate hypersensitivity response induced by OVA by altering the functional capacity of antigen-reactive Vβ8 T cells. |