Abstract: | Serum antibody responses of mice to repeatedly inhaled protein antigens such as bovine serum albumin and ovalbumin, plus or minus bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) in the form of an aerosol were studied. Results showed that the levels of responses to inhaled protein antigens varied, depending on the mouse strain-antigen combination and that LPS inhaled simultaneously with the antigens definitely augmented the responses which were not otherwise very high. LPS extracted from Klebsiella O3 (LPS-K) but not LPS from Escherichia coli O55 (LPS-E), which was inhaled at the time of initial inhalation of antigen, significantly intensified the priming for the secondary antibody response to the antigen subsequently inhaled. Both LPS-K and LPS-E, however, definitely acted to augment the response when they were inhaled repeatedly together with the antigen. Oral administration of antigen or antigen plus LPS-K did not induce any detectable antibody response in our experiment, ruling out the possibility that the antigen and LPS stimulated the immune system via alimentary canal rather than via lung. Tissue distribution of the radioactivity soon after inhalation of 131I-labeled antigen and decay speed of the radioactivity were not significantly changed by LPS-K inhaled simultaneously. This suggested that the augmentation of responses was not mediated by the action of LPS to modulate the air-blood barrier against the entry of antigen via lung. All the results prove for the first time that inhaled LPS displays a definite adjuvant action on antibody responses to inhaled antigens. |