BABESIA MICROTI IN MICE. ADOPTIVE TRANSFER OF IMMUNITY WITH SERUM AND CELLS
- 1 October 1984
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Immunology & Cell Biology
- Vol. 62 (5) , 551-566
- https://doi.org/10.1038/icb.1984.53
Abstract
Protection against infection with Babesia microti in mice was passively transferred with either serum or cells. Immune spleen cells were more effective than were immune mesenteric lymph node (MLN) cells in reducing parasitaemias in recipient mice, and the level of protection correlated with the donor to recipient ratio rather than with the number of cells transferred. Protection against primary infection in recipient mice was adoptively transferred by nylon wool adherent, B cell enriched subpopulations of spleen cells. In contrast, higher peak parasitaemias were apparent in mice which received nylon wool non-adherent, T enriched spleen cells in comparison with the control mice. However, if the recipient mice were reinfected, control of this second infection was greatest in the recipients of the T enriched cell subpopulation. Treatment of the protective nylon wool adherent, B cell subpopulation with anti- serum and complement abolished both the protective effect and the anamnestic antibody response in the recipient mice. This suggested that primed T cells controlled the expression of the protective antibody response by primed B cells.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- T cell-mediated immunity in malaria. I. The Ly phenotype of T cells mediating resistance to Plasmodium yoelii.The Journal of Immunology, 1982
- Transfer of immunity to Babesia microti of human origin using T lymphocytes in miceCellular Immunology, 1980
- The immune response of cattle to Babesia bovis (syn. B. argentina). Studies on the nature and specificity of protectionInternational Journal for Parasitology, 1979
- Babesia microti and Babesia hylomysci: Spleen and phagocytosis in infected miceExperimental Parasitology, 1979
- DOES ENDOTOXIN CAUSE BOTH THE DISEASE AND PARASITE DEATH IN ACUTE MALARIA AND BABESIOSIS?The Lancet, 1978
- SPLEEN-CELL CHANGES DURING FATAL AND SELF-LIMITING MALARIAL INFECTIONS OF MICE1978
- T-cell regulation of antibody responses: demonstration of allotype-specific helper T cells and their specific removal by suppressor T cells.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1976
- Adoptive transfer of immunity to Plasmodium berghei with immune T and B lymphocytesInfection and Immunity, 1976
- FURTHER IMPROVEMENTS IN PLAQUE TECHNIQUE FOR DETECTING SINGLE ANTIBODY-FORMING CELLS1968