1993 Volume 57 Issue 10 Pages 1674-1677
The systemic immune response against orally administered antigens is suppressed (oral tolerance), and this has been postulated to avoid excess immunity against dietary constituents which are present in large amounts in the gastrointestinal tract. Taking into consideration that such orally administered protein antigens are subjected to enzymatic degradation in the gastrointestinal tract, we examined whether an enzymatic digest of milk proteins could induce oral tolerance. A tryptic digest of casein, containing mainly fragments smaller than 6000 Da, was fed to mice as a constituent of their diet. Mice fed with the casein-digest diet responded poorly to subsequent immunization with casein, indicating that oral tolerance to casein was induced in these animals. The results suggest the presence of immunosuppressive fragment(s) in the casein digest, which may be of use for preventing milk allergy.
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