Publications by authors named "F W Chorpenning"

It has been shown previously that ingestion of glycerol teichoic acid (GTA) in the conventional laboratory diet (8 mg/kg) is the stimulus for natural background responses to GTA in rats. Since injected GTA suppresses responses to sheep red blood cells (SRBC), it was suspected that dietary GTA also might be acting suppressively. A comparison of rats fed the conventional diet with rats fed a GTA-free diet showed that ingested GTA markedly suppressed immune and background direct plaque-forming cell (PFC) responses to SRBC.

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The 4-day response of C3H/HeJ mice to sheep erythrocytes was suppressed by a lipid-free teichoic acid with an average molecular weight of 2,900 when it was administered by the intraperitoneal route. Enhancement was not observed at that time, and neither suppression nor enhancement could be demonstrated by the intravenous route. Either suppression or enhancement of background plaques could be induced, depending upon the timing.

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Guinea pigs which were injected with either whole bacilli or purified soluble glycerol teichoic acid (GTA) usually exhibited a rise in hemolysin titer to GTA-coated erythrocytes. The only exceptions were those animals having high baseline titers of natural anti-GTA antibodies. Rats yielded better responses than guinea pigs and produced significantly higher responses to the soluble antigen than to the cellular GTA.

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During the treatment of outbred Sprague-Dawley rats with methylnitrosourea (MNU) or the noncarcinogenic analog diphenylnitrosamine, antibody levels to teichoic acid as well as several parameters of lymphocyte and macrophage function were assessed in animals not overtly stimulated with antigen. Treatment with MNU did not appear to alter most immunologic parameters studied. Some alterations occurred in natural antibody levels, in spleen weight, and in peripheral blood differentials of rats that had received the highest carcinogen dose (4.

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