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Clinical and Experimental Immunology logoLink to Clinical and Experimental Immunology
. 1996 Jul;105(1):12–17. doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2249.1996.d01-728.x

Human antibody response to a pneumococcal vaccine in SCID-PBL-hu mice and simultaneously vaccinated human cell donors

I S AABERGE *, T E STEINSVIK , E-C GROENG , R-B LEIKVOLD , M LØVIK *,
PMCID: PMC2200466  PMID: 8697618

Abstract

Severe combined immunodeficient (SCID) mice were transplanted intraperitoneally with human peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) from nine healthy human donors (SCID-PBL-hu mice). None of the donors had ever received pneumococcal vaccine. Ten days after transplantation, 62 out of 111 transplanted mice and six of the nine donors were vaccinated with a 23-valent pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccine. For each donor, human IgG was detected in 91.7–100% of the SCID-PBL-hu mice, whereas specific human IgG antipneumococcal antibodies were demonstrated in 16.7–100% of the vaccinated SCID-PBL-hu mice. Most of the mice transplanted with cells from the same donor showed similar antibody response patterns in terms of kinetics and antibody levels. A significant antibody response was only obtained in mice that received cells from donors with relatively high antipneumococcal antibody levels at the time of transplantation, or donors that showed a substantial increase in antibody levels after vaccination. The immune response in the SCID-PBL-hu mice did not always reflect the ability of the respective donor to produce antipneumococcal antibodies. The donor dependency of the antipneumococcal antibody response has great practical importance for the use of the SCID-PBL-hu model. Donors should not be chosen randomly. By selecting donors whose cells have been found to result in successful engraftment, functional SCID-PBL-hu mice can be obtained for the study of human immune responses and function in an in vivo experimental model.

Keywords: SCID, SCID-PBL-hu, pneumococcal vaccine, anti-polysaccharide antibodies

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