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Trypanosoma cruzi: Correlation of resistance and susceptibility in infected inbred mice with the in vivo primary antibody response to sheep red blood cells
Authors:Herbert B. Tanowitz  Nagahiro Minato  Richard Lalonde  Murray Wittner
Affiliation:Departments of Medicine (Division of Infectious Disease) Pathology and Microbiology and Immunology, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, 1300 Morris Park Avenue, Bronx, New York 10461, U.S.A.
Abstract:Nonspecific immune responses during the course of murine Trypanosoma cruzi infection were examined in mouse strains genetically resistant or susceptible to the Brazil strain of T. cruzi. Spleen cells from infected susceptible (C3H) or resistant [C57 B1/10 and FI (C3H × C57)]mice at various points during the course of infection exhibited a reduced response to concanavalin A and lipopolysaccharide in vitro. Since this reduced response occurred in both susceptible and resistant mice, it was not predictive of resistance or susceptibility in vivo. We next examined the kinetics of in vivo primary antibody response to sheep red blood cells (SRBC) in infected C3H and C57 mice. C3H mice exhibited inhibition of the direct plaque-forming cell assay (d-PFC) which persisted until death. In contrast C57 mice exhibited no inhibition of the response at Day 5 and subsequently a markedly augmented response was observed. Other strains of mice were similarly investigated: all the susceptible mice examined (A/J, BALB/c) showed inhibition or depression of the primary antibody response and resistant mice [B10Br, C57B1/10, SJL, F1 (C3H × C57)]demonstrated either no inhibition or considerable augmentation of this response. CS7 mice resistant to the Brazil strain were susceptible to the Tulahuén strain. The mice in this latter group exhibited a markedly significant inhibition of the in vivo primary antibody response to SRBC. Culture forms of the Brazil strain protected C3H mice from a virulent challenge. This immunization resulted in a markedly augmented antibody response. The data reported herein are consistent with the notion that inhibition of the primary antibody response to SRBC correlates with susceptibility whereas no inhibition or, indeed, augmentation of the response correlates with natural as well as acquired resistance.
Keywords:Protozoa, parasitic  Hemoflagellate  Chagas' disease  Immunosuppression  Sheep erythrocytes, primary antibody response  Mitogens  Lipopolysaccharide  Concanavalin A
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