Defective vaccine-induced immunity to Schistosoma mansoni in P strain mice. II. Analysis of cellular responses.
Open Access
- 1 September 1984
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in The Journal of Immunology
- Vol. 133 (3) , 1587-1593
- https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.133.3.1587
Abstract
Cellular immune responses against larval and adult schistosome antigens were studied in attenuated cercariae-vaccinated P and C57BL/6 mice to define differences correlating with the inability of P mice to develop vaccine-induced resistance to challenge Schistosoma mansoni infection. Vaccinated P mice failed to demonstrate delayed hypersensitivity upon skin-testing with soluble worm antigens, whereas mice of the highly resistant strain C57BL/6 developed a significant 24-hr response to worm antigens in vivo. Also, when schistosome antigens were injected i.p., vaccinated P mice failed to exhibit an activated macrophage response in vivo, whereas vaccinated C57BL/6 mice developed macrophages with significant larvicidal and tumoricidal activity at the site of specific antigen challenge. Immune sera from either vaccinated C57BL/6 or P mice were equally effective at opsonizing the schistosomula targets in the larvicidal assay. In vitro analyses of cellular defects revealed that although T lymphocytes from vaccinated P mice showed blastogenic responses to schistosome antigens that were similar in magnitude and kinetics to those of cells from the C57BL/6 animals, T cells from C57BL/6 mice produced higher levels of macrophage-activating lymphokines (LK), including gamma-interferon. Macrophages from control C57BL/6 mice were also more responsive to activation by LK than macrophages from P mice were, as assessed by stimulation of these cells to kill skin-stage schistosomula in vitro. These two aspects of cellular dysfunction in P mice had the combined effect of rendering P macrophages incapable of activation by LK from mice of their own strain, whereas macrophages from C57BL/6 mice were strongly activated by LK from vaccinated C57BL/6 mice in the same assays. Thus, a correlation exists between T lymphocyte/macrophage dysfunction and lack of resistance to challenge infection in vaccinated P mice, which suggests that delayed hypersensitivity response plays a major role in the immunity to S. mansoni infection that is induced by exposure to radiation-attenuated cercariae.This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Attrition of schistosomes in an Irradiation-Attenuated Cercarial Immunization Model of Schistosoma mansoni *The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1981
- In vitroproliferative response to living schistosomula by T lymphocytes from mice infected withSchistosoma mansoniParasitology, 1981
- Schistosoma mansoni: The attrition of a challenge infection in mice immunized with highly irradiated live cercariaeExperimental Parasitology, 1980
- Defective tumoricidal capacity of macrophages from P/J mice: characterization of the macrophage cytotoxic defect after in vivo and in vitro activation stimuli.The Journal of Immunology, 1980
- Defective tumoricidal capacity of macrophages from P/J mice: tumoricidal defect involves abnormalities in lymphokine-derived activation stimuli and in mononuclear phagocyte responsiveness.The Journal of Immunology, 1980
- VARIABLE EXPRESSION OF DELAYED-HYPERSENSITIVITY IN DIFFERENT MOUSE STRAINS USING DIMETHYL DIOCTADECYL AMMONIUM BROMIDE AS AN ADJUVANT1980
- Macrophage activation for tumor cytotoxicity: Genetic variation in macrophage tumoricidal capacity among mouse strainsCellular Immunology, 1979
- Biochemical Relationship between Murine Immune Interferon and a Killer Cell Helper FactorThe Journal of Immunology, 1979
- Mediation of Macrophage Cytolytic and Phagocytic Activities by Antibodies of Different Classes and Class-Specific Fc-ReceptorsThe Journal of Immunology, 1977
- Definition and collection in quantity of schistosomules of Schistosoma mansoniTransactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1966