Alteration of the Immune Response to Mycobacterium Bovis BCG in Mice Exposed Chronically to Low Doses of UV Radiation
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Cell Biology
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BALB/c mice were exposed on shaved dorsal skin to 1 minimal erythemal dose (MED) of UVB radiation (2.25 kJ/m2) from a bank of six FS-40 sunlamps three times per week. The total number of irradiations ranged from 1 to 27. At regular intervals, groups of mice were injected in the left hind foot pad with 1 x 10(6) live mycobacteria (Mycobacterium bovis BCG) 3 days after the last UVB exposure. The mice were tested 21 and 42 days after infection for a delayed type hypersensitivity (DTH) response to the purified protein derivative (PPD) of tubercle bacilli by injecting PPD into the right hind foot pad and measuring the foot pad swelling 24 hr later. The course of infection was followed by assessing the number of bacterial colony forming units in the lymph node draining the site of BCG infection and the spleen. Mice exposed from 1 to 15 times to 1 MED of UV radiation showed a significant suppression in their DTH response to PPD compared with the unirradiated mice. At the same time, the number of bacterial colony-forming units in the lymph node and spleen of the UV-irradiated mice was greater than in control mice. With continued exposure to UVB, however, the DTH response recovered to a normal level, and there was no longer an increase in the number of viable bacteria in the lymphoid organs. These results indicate that early in the course of chronic UV irradiation, mice were impaired in their ability to mount a DTH response to BCG and to clear these bacteria from their lymphoid organs; later the mice recovered from these effects of UV, with continued treatment. A dose-response study using single doses of UV radiation indicated that a dose of 2.7 kJ/m2 suppressed the DTH response by 50%. Thus, exposure of mice to a single or multiple low doses of UV radiation prior to infection can interfere with systemic immunity to mycobacteria.
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