Protective and memory immunity to Histoplasma capsulatum in the absence of IL-10 |
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Authors: | Deepe George S Gibbons Reta S |
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Institution: | Veterans Affairs Hospital and Division of Infectious Diseases, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Cincinnati, OH 45267, USA. george.deepe@uc.edu |
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Abstract: | We determined whether the absence of IL-10 in mice influenced protective and memory immunity to Histoplasma capsulatum. IL-10(-/-) mice cleared primary and secondary infection more rapidly than wild-type controls. Administration of mAb to TNF-alpha or IFN-gamma, but not GM-CSF, abrogated protection in naive IL-10(-/-) mice; mAb to TNF-alpha, but not IFN-gamma or GM-CSF, subverted protective immunity in secondary histoplasmosis. The inflammatory cell composition in IL-10(-/-) mice was altered in those given mAb to IFN-gamma or TNF-alpha. More Gr-1(+) and Mac-3(+) cells were present in lungs of IL-10(-/-) mice given mAb to IFN-gamma, and treatment with mAb to TNF-alpha sharply reduced the number of CD8(+) cells in lungs of IL-10(-/-) mice. We ascertained whether the lack of IL-10 modulated memory T cell generation or the protective function of cells. The percentage of CD3(+), CD44(high), CD62(low), and IFN-gamma(+) cells in IL-10(-/-) mice was higher than that of wild-type at day 7 but not day 21 or 49 after immunization. Fewer splenocytes from immunized IL-10(-/-) mice were required to mediate protection upon adoptive transfer into infected TCR alphabeta(-/-) mice. Hence, deficiency of IL-10 confers a salutary effect on the course of histoplasmosis, and the beneficial effects of IL-10 deficiency require endogenous TNF-alpha and/or IFN-gamma. Memory cell generation was transiently increased in IL-10(-/-) mice, but the protective function conferred by cells from these mice following immunization is strikingly more vigorous than that of wild-type. |
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