Abstract
E-64, L-trans-epoxysuccinyl-leucylamido (4-guanidino) butane, a specific inhibitor of thiol proteases originally isolated from the culture of a fungus, was examined in connection with the immune responses to the splenocytes of mice.
In cultures of C3H/He mouse splenocytes, E-64 and its analogues showed mitogenic activity, and some of them enhanced the lymphocyte blast transformation induced by a suboptimal concentration of concanavalin A. E-64 caused a significant suppressive effect on the secondary anti-SRBC responses when 7- or 14-day-primed BDF1 mouse splenocytes were cultured with SRBC, while it induced no effect on cultured splenocytes either from mice treated with cyclophosphamide, from mice sensitized with dinitrophenyl-Ficoll. The results with E-64 and its close analogues revealed that their effects on the immune response roughly correlated with their inhibitory activity against thiol protease.
These results suggest that a thiol protease might be involved in the process of secondary immune response in mouse splenocytes.