T-cell-mediated protection of mice against virulent Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- 1 February 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Society for Microbiology in Infection and Immunity
- Vol. 57 (2) , 390-395
- https://doi.org/10.1128/iai.57.2.390-395.1989
Abstract
We sought to protect CBA mice against tuberculosis using in vivo transfer of a T-cell line previously shown to be capable of I-A-restricted recognition of peritoneal macrophages infected in vitro with M. tuberculosis. This line induces total bacteriostasis in vitro. In mice that recceived 500 rads of irradiation 48 h before infection, the T-cell line caused significant prolongation of life when given intravenously with a challenge dose of 5 .times. 106 organisms. Similar experiments with two other T-cell lines showed that these lines offered no protection. Bacterial load at the time of death was inversely related to he time of survival. Thus, death occurred at a lower bacterial load in adoptively protected mice, implying the contribution of an immunopathological component in these animals. The protective T-cell line, which was CD4+ CD8-, had no effect on the rate of growth of strain BCG in CBA nu/nu mice or M. tuberculosis in fully T-cell-deprived mice. This could indicate that CD8+ cells play a role in this system or that there is a need for the recruitment of interleukin 2-producing cells in the recipient. Experiments with monoclonal antibodies to selectively deplete T-cell subsets in normal CBA mice showed that depletion of CD4+ cells strikingly shortened survival, whereas depletion of CD8+ cells did not. However, CD8-depleted mice died with a lower bacterial load than those found in nondepleted controls, and the lesions in CD8-depleted mice were histopathologically distinct. These results suggest that the CD8+ cells either down-regulate bacteriostasis or caused immunopathology in this model and that it is the CD4+ cells that are the major protective subset in long-term protection experiments.This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
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