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1.
Adult H. polygyrus are capable of surviving for many months after primary exposure of mice to infective larvae, raising the possibility that worms of this species have inherent resistance to intestinal immune responses. Accordingly experiments were carried out to determine whether H. polygyrus are resistant to the inflammatory changes elicited during the acute phase of the intestinal response to Trichinella spiralis. Adult worms were expelled from mice when their presence coincided with the most intense phase of inflammation elicited by T. spiralis. The effect was dose-dependent with more intense T. spiralis challenge resulting in a correspondingly greater loss of H. polygyrus. Even the less pathogenic species T. pseudospiralis elicited a response of sufficient intensity in NIH mice to cause the expulsion of H. polygyrus from concurrently infected animals. Tissue larval stages of H. polygyrus were protected from expulsion by their location deep in the intestinal walls and the maximum detrimental effect against H. polygyrus was observed during the adult phase or during the establishment of L3 larvae. Acceleration of the response to T. spiralis in immune challenged mice resulted in earlier loss of H. polygyrus. When the expulsion of T. spiralis was delayed (e.g. from slow responder C57BL/10 mice) the loss of H. polygyrus took place correspondingly later. These experiments demonstrate unequivocally that mouse strains which normally tolerate chronic infections with H. polygyrus have the capacity to mount intestinal inflammatory responses of sufficient vigour to remove the worms but that this potential is not normally realized. However, the observation that some H. polygyrus always survived even when the response induced by T. spiralis was of the rapid secondary type suggests that the parasites are resilient in the face of the inflammatory response capable of removing most of the worms. It is suggested that in addition to the immunomodulatory strategy employed by adult worms to prevent the intestinal response being elicited, the worms have a second line of defence which is reflected in their resilience to responses which they have been unable to prevent.  相似文献   

2.
Two strains of mice which share identical H-2 genes but differ in their genetic backgrounds were compared for their ability to resist infection with Trichinella spiralis. The two strains of mice, C3HeB/FeJ and AKR/J, share the H-2k haplotype which is associated with susceptibility to primary infection with T. spiralis in H-2 congenic strains of mice. AKR/J mice, infected with 150 infective muscle larvae, harbored significantly fewer muscle larvae 30 days postinfection than did mice of the strain C3HeB/FeJ. Approximately equal numbers of worms establish in the small intestine of AKR and C3H mice, but the AKR mice expelled adult worms from the gut more rapidly than did mice of the C3H strain. By Day 9 postinfection, 50% of the worms had been expelled by the AKR mice whereas expulsion of worms from C3H mice was delayed beyond Day 9 and occurred primarily between Days 10 and 12. Over this same experimental period (Days 6-12), fecundity of female worms from AKR mice, measured as the mean newborn larvae/female/hour, was approximately one-half that of worms taken from C3H mice. These results support the conclusion that genes outside of the mouse H-2 complex regulate expulsion of adult worms from the gut. These background genes also markedly influence the fecundity of female worms.  相似文献   

3.
The implantation and development of intravenously injected Trichinella spiralis newborn larvae were examined in different strains of inbred mice by determining muscle larvae burden. This was compared to the numbers of muscle larvae that established after a natural infection during which a quantitative assessment of intestinal newborn larvae production was made. In most inbred strains of mice, newborn larvae do not all successfully implant in muscle. Mice of the DBA/1 strain are the most resistant to successful implantation, and C3H mice are the most permissive. This pattern is evident in the strains studied whether newborn larvae are injected intravenously or are produced by intestinal adults. Thus, after a natural infection, 100% of intestinally produced newborn larvae implanted in C3H mice, whereas in NFR 68% and DBA/1 mice 62% successfully matured in muscle. Immunity to newborn larvae could be demonstrated as early as 10 days after exposure to this stage of the life cycle. This immunity was protective against a complete challenge infection given 9 days after newborn larvae had been injected intravenously. Protection against newborn larvae was identical in male and female mice or in mice from 1 to 9 months of age. We conclude that there are two mechanisms by which mice impair newborn larvae establishment or development in muscle. The first appears to be nonimmunological (non-specific resistance), and the second is immunological. Genetically determined variation in strain-specific expression is apparent with both mechanisms. In strains displaying high intrinsic "resistance" (DBA/1), this process is likely to account for most of the 38% reduction in newborn larvae establishment in a primary infection. However, immunity against newborn larvae develops quickly enough to have a significant effect on migratory larvae in primary infections where adults persist in the intestine (e.g., the B10 congenic mice), or when high adult worm burdens delay adult worm rejection. Muscle larvae burden, therefore, reflects systemic nonspecific resistance to newborn larvae as well as immunological processes that occur in the intestine and systemically.  相似文献   

4.
We have previously found that co-immunisation with ovalbumin (OVA) and the body fluid of the helminth Ascaris suum inhibited an OVA-specific delayed type hypersensitivity (DTH) response by reducing OVA-specific CD4+ T lymphocyte proliferation via an IL-4 independent mechanism. In the present study, we determined whether parasite infections themselves could induce similar changes to peripheral immunisation by examining the modulation of OVA-specific immune responses during acute and chronic helminth infections. Surprisingly, an acute infection with Trichinella spiralis, but not a chronic infection with Heligmosomoides polygyrus, inhibited the OVA-specific DTH reaction. Correspondingly, the T helper 1 (Th1) OVA-specific response was decreased in mice infected with T. spiralis, but not with H. polygyrus. Inhibition of the Th1 response may be a result of a shift in the Th1/Th2 balance as although both H. polygyrus and T. spiralis infected mice induced a Th2 OVA-specific response, that exhibited by T. spiralis was more potent. Furthermore, although IL-10 secretion upon OVA restimulation was similarly increased by both infections, production of this immunoregulatory cytokine may play a role in the suppression of immune responses observed with T. spiralis infection depending on the context of its release. Interestingly, analysis of the OVA-specific T lymphocyte division by carboxyfluorescein diacetate succinimidyl ester (CFSE) staining revealed that gastro-intestinal infection with the acute helminth T. spiralis, but not with chronic H. polygyrus, inhibited the systemic immune response by significantly inhibiting the antigen-specific T cell proliferation during the primary response, a mechanism similar to that observed when A. suum parasite extracts were directly mixed with the OVA during immunisation in our previous studies.  相似文献   

5.
One outbred (CF1) and four inbred (BALB/c, C57, CBA and C3H) strains of mice were tested for susceptibility to Babesia microti of human origin. Of these, intact C3H mice developed higher parasitemia than all other intact mice, while BALB/c mice developed the highest parasitemia among splenectomized mice. Susceptibility was not related to H-2 haplotype in any obvious way. Because C3H and BALB/c mice developed relatively high initial peak parasitemias, the parasite was serially passaged in both of these mouse strains in an attempt to increase parasite virulence. After 30 passages in BALB/c and 49 passages in C3H mice over a period of 12 months, maximum parasitemias were 50 times higher than those observed initially. After the peak parasitemias of these two mouse-adapted parasites had stabilized, the relationship between onset and level of maximum parasitemia and number of parasites inoculated was determined. With both C3H- and BALB/c-adapted parasites, as inoculum size increased, the time required to reach maximum parasitemia decreased and the level of maximum parasitemia increased. Studies involving infection of either mouse strain with parasites adapted to the heterologous mouse strain indicated that C3H mice were more susceptible than BALB/c mice to homologous or heterologous parasites. These data suggest that the virulence of B. microti to the mouse can be increased by prolonged passage in this host. Once adaptation to this host species has occurred, virulence appears to be more dependent on the innate susceptibility of the mouse strain than on adaptation of the parasites to a particular strain of mouse.  相似文献   

6.
Trypanosoma musculi infections were given to mice of different strains before, at the same time, and after an infection with 400 Trichinella spiralis. Examined parameters of the host response to T. spiralis were worm rejection, antifecundity responses, development of immunological memory, and muscle larvae burden. After dual infection, each mouse strain showed characteristic effects on resistance to T. spiralis. This was due to a dynamic interaction between the genes controlling rejection of T. spiralis and those influencing T. musculi growth. C3H mice develop high trypanosome parasitemias. This impairs worm expulsion and the development of memory to T. spiralis when Trypanosoma infections take place on the same day or 7 days before. The C57B1/6 mouse develops low parasitemias and T. musculi infections on the same day, or 7 days before T. spiralis, delaying worm rejection only slightly despite the overall weak capacity of B6 mice to expel worms. NFR-strain mice are strong responders to T. spiralis and also develop low parasitemias. Trypanosome infections on the same day, or after T. spiralis, produce a delay in worm rejection; the former is comparable to C3H mice. However, NFR mice alone showed enhanced rejection of worm when T. musculi infections preceded T. spiralis by 7 days. An unusual feature of C3H mice was that T. musculi infections 7 days before T. spiralis increased antifecundity responses at the same time that worm expulsion was inhibited. Trypanosome infections can therefore modulate distinct antihelminth immune responses in different directions simultaneously. The different outcomes of dual infections compared with single infections provides another selective mechanism by which genetic polymorphisms can be established and maintained in the vertebrate host.  相似文献   

7.
The intestinal mast cell response and lymphoblast activity, as measured by the incorporation of 3H-thymidine into mesenteric lymph node cells (MLN) of WBB6F1-w/wv(w/wv) mice, their normal congenic littermates (+/+) and C57BL/6J mice, were compared after infection with Trichinella spiralis. Marked and similar blast cell activity and an increase in number of cells were observed in the MLN of infected w/wv and C57BL/6J mice 7 and 15 days P.I. In contrast to C57BL/6J mice, primary T. spiralis intestinal infections were prolonged in w/wv mice and more muscle larvae were recovered from w/wv mice 29 days post-infection. In C57BL/6J mice mucosal mast cell (MMC) numbers increased on day 7 P.I. whereas in w/wv mice these cells did not increase significantly until day 15 post-infection, reaching a peak on day 22. In w/wv mice, the response to secondary infection as determined by an accelerated expulsion of adult worms did not occur until day 11 postchallenge whereas in +/+ and C57BL/6J mice worm expulsion was nearly complete at that time. In both primary and secondary infections, the MMC numbers in w/wv mice were significantly lower than in C57BL/6J or +/+ mice. The results suggest that prolongation of T. spiralis infection in w/wv mice is associated with delayed appearance of mast cells in the intestinal mucosa which may reflect slow generation of the intestinal inflammatory response.  相似文献   

8.
T helper cell (Th1 and Th2) associated responses were examined following a primary infection with the gastrointestinal nematode Heligmosomoides polygyrus in five inbred strains of mice with different resistance phenotypes. Levels of (i) mast cell protease, (ii) specific IgE, (iii) nitric oxide and (iv) specific IgG2a, as markers of Th2 and Th1 associated responses, respectively, were determined in sera and intestinal fluids and correlated with worm burdens. The "fast" responder (resistant) strains SWR and SJL produced strong Th2 and Th1 associated responses respectively in a mutually exclusive fashion. The F1 hybrid (SWRxSJL) F1, showed rapid expulsion of the parasite and expressed both intense Th1 and Th2 responses, suggesting synergism between Th1 and Th2 activity in these mice. The results indicate that both Th2 and Th1 responses operate in mice following a primary infection with H. polygyrus and that each Th response may be involved to a greater or lesser degree within certain strains. Resistance to H. polygyrus was found to correlate only to the intensity of either the gut-associated mastocytosis or nitric oxide production in these strains but not to either specific IgE or IgG2a titres. Chronic infections in the "slow" response phenotype mouse strains CBA and C57BL/10, were associated with both poor Th2 and poor Th1-associated responses attributed to a general parasite-mediated immunosuppression of the host immune response to infection.  相似文献   

9.
There appear to be two phases in the control of parasitemia in acute Chagas' disease in the mouse. The first phase occurs during the first few weeks after infection and control is achieved through a thymus-dependent, antibody-independent mechanism. Challenge of B cell-suppressed C3H and F1 (C57BL/6 X C3H) mice with the Brazil strain of Trypanosoma cruzi led to a course of parasitemia for the first 3 wk after infection similar to that seen in normal C3H or F1 mice and markedly lower than the parasite levels observed in the blood of nu/nu mice. Challenge of BXH-2 recombinant inbred mice resulted in a course of parasitemia similar to that seen in nu/nu mice up to day 16 despite the production of normal levels of antibody. The BXH-2 mice lack the ability to effect the early control of parasitemia. The second phase begins several weeks after infection with the rise in antibody titer, and the control is exerted through an antibody-mediated mechanism. In all B cell-suppressed mice, an inexorable rise in parasitemia occurred up to the time of death, which suggests that antibody is important for the eventual clearance of parasites from the blood. A comparison of the IgM and IgG antibody titers to T. cruzi in a series of resistant and susceptible strains showed that there was no correlation between the appearance of specific antibody or antibody titers and the levels of parasitemia observed. The level of parasitemia attained in the late acute phase may be primarily determined by the extent of parasite proliferation in the early acute phase.  相似文献   

10.
Primary infection with Heligmosomoides polygyrus in some strains of mice is chronic although fast responder mouse strains eliminate the parasite in a short period of time. The reason for the differences is unknown. In this study apoptosis, proliferation, IL-2 and IL-6 production of mesenteric lymph node (MLN) and spleen cells in vitro from fast (FVB) and slow (C57Bl/6) responder mice were compared during H. polygyrus infection. FVB cells showed decreased apoptosis, more proliferation and more cytokine production than cells from C57Bl/6 mice during infection. At the beginning of infection in C57Bl/6 mice the apoptosis of CD4(+) but not CD8(+) cells significantly increased in MLN and spleen cell cultures. Apoptosis, when the first immune signal is given by infective larvae, might play an important role in the modulation of the response in slow responder mice.  相似文献   

11.
Very little is known about the role played by complement in vivo during Trichinella spiralis infections, although previous reports indicate that it binds readily to the surfaces of muscle stages of the parasite in vitro. In order to study the binding of complement to muscle-stage larvae in vivo, larvae were recovered from BALB-c inbred, NFR/N inbred, and Swiss white outbred mice from 20 to 95 days postinfection. The presence of C3 was examined by direct immunofluorescence and leucocyte- and erythrocyte-adherence tests. Complement was found on a few larvae from the outbred strain and only rarely on larvae from the 2 inbred strains. Histological sections prepared from inbred strains and used in immunofluorescence tests to study in situ complement activation and binding were negative. Larvae from all 3 mouse strains bound complement 100% of the time when it was added to the worms in vitro. The results indicate that extrapolation from in vitro to in vivo activation and binding of complement to T. spiralis larvae may not be valid.  相似文献   

12.
Seven experiments were carried out to test the hypothesis that concurrent infection with the chronic and immunomodulatory intestinal nematode parasites, Heligmosomoides polygyrus, and the piroplasm, Babesia microti, would result in more intense and long-lasting infections with the hemoprotozoan. However, despite variations in the experimental protocols (different mouse strains, varying levels of infection and different intervals between infection with the two species) a significantly higher B. microti parasitaemia was detected on only one occasion, and a significantly lower parasitaemia on two occasions, relative to control mice. In none of our experiments was the duration of infection prolonged. We conclude that the presence of H. polygyrus does not interfere markedly with the host's ability to mount a protective response against B. microti and hence season-dependent peaks of abundance of H. polygyrus in wild rodents are unlikely to present a particular threat to human communities by providing a greater reservoir of infection with B. microti in wild rodents than at other times of the year.  相似文献   

13.
Trichinella spiralis infection elicits a vigorous IgE response and pronounced intestinal and splenic mastocytosis in mice. Since IgE both activates mast cells (MC) and promotes their survival in culture, we examined its role in MC responses and parasite elimination in T. spiralis-infected mice. During primary infection, wild-type but not IgE-deficient (IgE(-/-)) BALB/c mice mounted a strong IgE response peaking 14 days into infection. The splenic mastocytosis observed in BALB/c mice following infection with T. spiralis was significantly diminished in IgE(-/-) mice while eosinophil responses were not diminished in either the blood or jejunum. Similar levels of peripheral blood eosinophilia and jejunal mastocytosis occurred in wild-type and IgE-deficient animals. Despite the normal MC response in the small intestine, serum levels of mouse MC protease-1 also were lower in parasite-infected IgE(-/-) animals and these animals were slower to eliminate the adult worms from the small intestine. The number of T. spiralis larvae present in the skeletal muscle of IgE(-/-) mice 28 days after primary infection was about twice that in BALB/c controls, and the fraction of larvae that was necrotic was reduced in the IgE-deficient animals. An intense deposition of IgE in and around the muscle larvae was observed in wild-type but not in IgE null mice. We conclude that IgE promotes parasite expulsion from the gut following T. spiralis infection and participates in the response to larval stages of the parasite. Furthermore, our observations support a role for IgE in the regulation of MC homeostasis in vivo.  相似文献   

14.
To determine whether IgE+ cells in the intestinal mucosa of nematode-infected mice were of a mast cell or a lymphocyte lineage, the intestinal mucosae of mast cell-deficient w/wv mice were examined for IgE+ cells after inoculation with Trichinella spiralis muscle-stage larvae. Immunofluorescence staining techniques were used to detect IgE associated with cells in the intestinal mucosa. Comparisons were made among four strains of mice, w/wv (mast cell-deficient), +/+ (normal congenic littermates of w/wv), BALB/c, and SJL, that were either uninfected controls or inoculated with T. spiralis. Tissue sections from the small intestine of T. spiralis-infected BALB/c, SJL, and +/+ mice were fixed in ethanol and were stained with an affinity-purified F(ab')2 rabbit anti-mouse IgE followed by FITC goat anti-rabbit IgG. Large numbers of cells in the intestinal mucosa exhibited bright fluorescence. When other sections of intestines from these mice were processed in Carnoy's fixative and were stained with alcian blue at low pH (a metachromatic stain for mast cells) or alcian blue followed by immunofluorescence staining for IgE, large numbers of mast cells were observed in the intestinal mucosa, and 70 to 90% stained positively for IgE. There was a considerable number of cells in the intestinal mucosa which were IgE+ but which did not stain with alcian blue. Few alcian blue-positive cells and no IgE+ staining cells were present in the intestinal mucosa of control, uninfected +/+, BALB/c, and SJL mice. To determine whether these IgE+ alcian blue-negative cells were of a lymphocyte or a mast cell lineage, the mast cell-deficient w/wv mouse strain was examined after infection with T. spiralis. In contrast to BALB/c, SJL, or +/+ mice, few cells in the intestinal mucosa of T. spiralis-infected w/wv mice stained with alcian blue or were positive for IgE. However, when the IgE response in the MLN of the w/wv mice was compared to the IgE response of BALB/c, SJL, and +/+ mice, numerous IgE+ cells, but no alcian blue-positive cells, were observed in the parenchyma of the MLN from all four strains of T. spiralis-infected mice. In addition, flow microfluorometric analysis of MLN cells stained for surface IgE in suspension showed a comparable proportion of IgE-bearing cells, which were mostly B lymphocytes, among all four strains of T. spiralis-infected mice.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
Peritoneal macrophage activation as measured by H2O2 release and histopathology was compared between Swiss mice and Calomys callosus, a wild rodent, reservoir of Trypanosoma cruzi, during the course of infection with four strains of this parasite. In mice F and Y strain infections result in high parasitemia and mortality while with silvatic strains Costalimai and M226 parasitemia is sub-patent, with very low mortality. H2O2 release peaked at 33.6 and 59 nM/2 x 10(6) cells for strains Y and F, respectively, 48 and 50 nM/2 x 10(6) for strains Costalimai and M226, at different days after infection. Histopathological findings of myositis, myocarditis, necrotizing arteritis and absence of macrophage parasitism were found for strains F and Costalimai. Y strain infection presented moderate myocarditis and myositis, with parasites multiplying within macrophages. In C. callosus all four strains resulted in patent parasitemia which was eventually overcome, with scarce mortality. H2O2 release for strains Y and F was comparable to that of mice-peaks of 27 and 53 nM/2 x 10(6) cells, with lower values for strains Costalimai and M226-16.5 and 4.6 nM/2 x 10(6) cells, respectively. Histopathological lesions with Y and F strain injected animals were comparable to those of mice at the onset of infections; they subsided completely at the later stages with Y strain and partially with F strain infected C. callosus. In Costalimai infected C. callosus practically no histopathological alterations were observed.  相似文献   

16.
The immune response to a primary infection of Heligmosomoides polygyrus (Nematospiroides dubius) was studied by flow cytometry in three strains of mice, BALB/c, CBA, and NIH. The chief feature of the response was a pronounced increase, during the first week, in the proportion of B lymphocytes in the mesenteric lymph nodes. All three strains also showed an increase in lymph node cellularity, although this was delayed in NIH and CBA mice. Total B cell numbers thus also increased, particularly in the BALB/c and NIH strains but only in the latter was this response maintained throughout the 4-week study. Although the early changes in B cell frequency were similar in all three strains, B cell responses were greatest in BALB/c mice, and most prolonged in NIH, when they persisted into the adult phase of the infection. These features distinguished them from CBA mice, and could be associated with known variations in resistance to challenge infections. An increase in T cell numbers was delayed in comparison with the changes in the B cell population, and the ratio of 'helper' to 'suppressor/cytotoxic' T cells remained more or less constant in all three strains. There was thus no evidence for an increase in the frequency of suppressor T cells in any strain of mouse.  相似文献   

17.
Strains of outbred (ICR/CD1 and S--W) and inbred (BALB/C and C57BL/6) mice vaccinated subcutaneously (SQ) with 500, 1,000, or 2,000 exsheathed Heligmosomoides polygyrus larvae developed varying levels of protection upon subsequent oral challenge with larvae. In contrast, the inbred C3H/HEJ strain failed to develop protection at any dosage level tested. ICR/CD1 mice vaccinated intraperitoneally with exsheathed larvae developed a high level of resistance but exhibited extensive adhesions of the viscera. When ensheathed larvae were used for vaccination, ICR/CD1 mice developed a moderate level of protection; but 1% of the vaccine dose was recovered in the intestine as adult stages. Both the inbred and outbred strains given multiple oral infections developed a protection response similar to that strain's response following parenteral vaccination. The specificity of this protection was demonstrated using various complex foreign antigens. In contrast, the self-cure response was observed only in the S--W strain.  相似文献   

18.
Inbred strains of mice have shown marked differences in susceptibility to infection with Trypanosoma congolense, as judged by survival and levels of parasitemia. The underlying genetic basis of the susceptibility was examined with F1 hybrids and backcrosses derived from mouse strains of high and low susceptibility. The influence of H-2 haplotype on susceptibility was studied using H-2 congenic resistant strains of mice. F1 hybrids between the most susceptible strain (A/J) and the least susceptible strain (C57Bl/6) showed similar survival to that of the C57Bl/6 parent. This was reflected in a similar undulating pattern of parasitemia, although the level of parasitemia was consistently higher in the F1 hybrids than in the C57Bl/6. Backcrosses of the F1 hybrids with C57Bl/6 also had a similar pattern of parasitemia although there was a greater scatter in survival times so that a few animals survived longer than either of the parental strains. Backcrosses of F1 hybrids with A/J showed a range of survival times; approximately 25% of these animals died during the period when the A/J mice died, approximately 25% had a similar survival to that of C57Bl/6, while the remaining animals showed an intermediate duration of survival. All these backcrosses had a high initial peak of parasitemia; in about 70% of the mice the early parasitemia showed a distinct undulating pattern. F1 hybrids of A/J and C57Bl/6 with C3H/He mice, which are known to be of intermediate susceptibility, were also examined. The degree of dominance for low susceptibility was much less pronounced in these hybrid combinations than in the A/J × C57Bl/6 hybrids. The H-2 congenic resistant strains, all of which were on a C57Bl/10 genetic background, showed a similar pattern of parasitemia and survival. However, although the majority of all these strains survived for more than 100 days, there was a significant difference in survival between the C57Bl/10 mice and the H-2 congenic resistant strains. It was concluded that susceptibility of mice to T. congolense infection is likely to be under complex genetic control and that, at least in C57Bl/mice, H-2 haplotype has little influence on susceptibility.  相似文献   

19.
Experiments were carried out to explore the survival of 14-day adult H. polygyrus following transplantation to mice of four strains, immunized by various protocols. Adult worm establishment and survival was unimpaired in CFLP mice which were totally refractory to larval challenge. Transplanted adult worms were also successful in NIH mice immunized by the 9-day abbreviated infection regime. However, NIH mice exposed to irradiated larvae or subjected to the divided primary infection, expelled transplanted adults. The 9-day abbreviated infection was further examined in SJL and (C57 Bl10 X NIH) F1 mice which expel adult worms during a primary infection and although this regime was unsuccessful in causing NIH mice to reject adult worms, expulsion of adult worms was accelerated in SJL and F1 mice. The survival of adult H. polygyrus was discussed in the context of stage-specific immunity and the delicate balance between the immunogenic stimuli from developing larvae, the immunomodulatory activities of adult stages and the host's genetically determined capacity to respond to these opposing signals.  相似文献   

20.
The immune response of inbred strains of mice was studied following infection with isolates of Trichinella from a pig (P1), an arctic fox (AF1), and T. spiralis var. pseudospiralis (TP). Strains of mice previously characterized as highly resistant to a separate pig isolate of T. spiralis responded to the P1 and AF1 isolates by expelling over 80% of the worms by day 10 postinfection (PI), and by suppressing the in vitro release of newborn larvae by female worms. However, the response induced by AF1 worms was expressed more quickly when compared to responses induced by the P1 and TP isolates. The host response to TP was less as recovery was always higher at day 10 PI and antifecundity effects were not induced in TP worms even in highly resistant strains of mice. Strains of mice previously characterized as susceptible to T. spiralis infection were slow to develop resistance when compared to the resistant mouse strains, but even among the susceptible strains, infection with AF1 induced a more rapid response. The mouse strains used in these experiments allowed us to assess the role of the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) and/or non-MHC genes in influencing the responses observed. As previously reported for a pig isolate of T. spiralis, both MHC and non-MHC genes influenced the rate at which worms were expelled from the gut and the host response that limits the fecundity of adult female worms.  相似文献   

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