Studies on the induction of tolerance to alloantigens. II. The generation of serum factor(s) able to transfer alloantigen-specific tolerance for delayed-type hypersensitivity by portal venous inoculation with allogeneic cells.

Abstract
The administration of C3H/He spleen cells into allogeneic BALB/c mice via portal venous (p.v.) route resulted in C3H/He alloantigen-specific tolerance for delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) responses. When serum from these tolerant BALB/c mice were transferred into naive syngeneic BALB/c mice, the recipient mice lost the capability of generating DTH responses as induced by s.c. immunization with C3H/He cells. Tolerance was transferred only by serum from BALB/c mice inoculated p.v. with C3H/He cells, but not by serum from C3H/He mice inoculated p.v. with C3H/He cells, or BALB/c mice inoculated i.v. with C3H/He cells. This tolerogenic activity in serum from p.v. inoculated BALB/c mice was C3H/He alloantigen specific, because the transfer of the serum did not interfere with the development of anti-C57BL/6 DTH responses in recipient BALB/c mice. Such a serum factor(s) was inducible as early as 1 wk after the inoculation of C3H/He cells into BALB/c mice and not associated with anti-C3H/He alloantibody activity. Moreover, anti-C3H/He or C57BL/6-specific tolerogenic factor(s) prepared in the respective BALB/c or C3H/He mice was successfully transferred into totally allogeneic recipient mice, indicating no requirement of H-2, as well as non-H-2 restriction for the function of serum tolerogenic factor(s). Thus this study demonstrates that p.v. inoculation of allogeneic cells generates serum factor(s) able to transfer in H-2 and non-H-2-unrestricted manners the in vivo tolerance of the alloreactivity specific for alloantigens used for p.v. inoculation.