STUDIES OF THE TRANSPORT OF POLYCLONAL IGA ANTIBODY FROM BLOOD TO BILE IN RATS

  • 1 January 1980
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 39 (4), 463-467
Abstract
Bile or thoracic duct lymph collected from rats 7-9 days after suspensions of (Brucella abortus, Salmonella typhi or SRBC [sheep red blood cells] had been injected into the Peyer''s patches, contained high titers or specific agglutinins. Samples of these fluids were injected i.v. into unimmunized, syngeneic recipients and the partitioning between blood and bile of the injected antibodies was studied and found to depend on the source and class of the antibody. Ig[immunoglobulin]A antibodies from lymph plasma disappeared rapidly from the recipients'' blood and half of the dose was recovered in the bile within 2 h of its injection. IgA antibodies collected from bile had previously traversed the liver and acquired secretory component, and appeared in the recipients'' bile much less rapidly so that less than half of the dose entered the bile over a period of 40 h. Passively administered IgG antibodies did not enter the recipients'' bile to any significant extent and specific hemolysins never appeared in the bile after passive or active immunization.