7 research outputs found

    Distinct genetic control of parasite elimination, dissemination, and disease after Leishmania major infection

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    Elimination of pathogens is the basis of host resistance to infections; however, relationship between persisting pathogens and disease has not been clarified. Leishmania major infection in mice is an important model of host–pathogen relationship. Infected BALB/c mice exhibit high parasite numbers in lymph nodes and spleens, and a chronic disease with skin lesions, splenomegaly, and hepatomegaly, increased serum IgE levels and cytokine imbalance. Although numerous gene loci affecting these disease symptoms have been reported, genes controlling parasites’ elimination or dissemination have never been mapped. We therefore compared genetics of the clinical and immunologic symptomatology with parasite load in (BALB/c × CcS-11) F2 hybrids and mapped five loci, two of which control parasite elimination or dissemination. Lmr5 influences parasite loads in spleens (and skin lesions, splenomegaly, and serum IgE, IL-4, and IFNγ levels), and Lmr20 determines parasite numbers in draining lymph nodes (and serum levels of IgE and IFNγ), but no skin or visceral pathology. Three additional loci do not affect parasite numbers but influence significantly the disease phenotype—Lmr21: skin lesions and IFNγ levels, Lmr22: IL-4 levels, Lmr23: IFNγ levels, indicating that development of L. major-caused disease includes critical regulations additional to control of parasite spread

    Prevention of corneal allograft rejection in a mouse model of high risk recipients

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    Aim: To determine the effectiveness of treatment with immunosuppressive drugs and monoclonal antibodies (mAb) after penetrating keratoplasty in two different models of high risk mouse recipients. Methods: Corneas were grafted orthotopically in mouse models of high risk recipients with either neovascularisation of the graft bed or presensitisation to graft donor antigens. Recipients were treated with mAb against CD4(+) or CD8(+) cells or against T cells, or were treated with cyclosporin A (CsA) or mycophenolate mofetil (MMF), or a combination of both drugs. Results: Control untreated recipients with neovascularised graft bed or presensitised to the graft donor antigens rejected corneal allografts in 12.5 (SD 2.3) and 9.9 (1.6) days, respectively. Treatment of graft recipients with a neovascularised graft bed with mAb anti-CD4 or anti-T cells, but not with mAb anti-CD8 or with immunosuppressive drugs, resulted in a significant prolongation of graft survival; 75% and 28.5%, respectively, of grafts survived for more than 45 days after grafting. However, none of the treatments were successful in presensitised recipients. Conclusions: Treatment of high risk recipients with mAb anti-CD4 is more effective in preventing corneal allograft rejection than the treatment with mAb anti-CD8 or the immunosuppressive drugs MMF and CsA. However, the effectiveness of the treatment depends on the recipients’ pretransplantation risk type

    Induction of specific transplantation immunity by oral immunization with allogeneic cells

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    Oral administration of antigen has been shown to be effective for both positive and negative modulation of immune responses. In the present study we characterized changes in the reactivity of the immune system after oral immunization with allogeneic spleen cells. Mice were orally immunized for 10 consecutive days with fresh allogeneic spleen cells, and the phenotype, proliferative response, cytotoxic activity and cytokine production profile of recipient spleen cells were assessed 1 or 7 days after the last immunization dose. Although no significant changes in the proportion of CD4+, CD8+ or CD25+ cells were observed in the spleen of orally immunized mice, significant activation of alloreactivity in spleen cells was found. Cells from orally immunized mice exhibited enhanced proliferation and cytotoxic activity after stimulation with specific allogeneic cells in vitro, and produced considerably higher concentrations of interferon-γ (IFN-γ) and significantly less interleukin (IL)-4 than did cells from control mice. The production of IL-2 was essentially unchanged and that of IL-10 was only slightly increased. The systemic allosensitization induced by oral immunization was demonstrated in vivo by increased resistance to the growth of allogeneic tumours induced by subcutaneous inoculation of high doses of tumour cells. In addition, orthotopic corneal allografts in orally immunized recipients were rejected more rapidly (in a second-set manner) than in control, untreated recipients. These data show that oral immunization with allogeneic cells modulates individual components of the immune response and that specific transplantation immunity, rather than tolerance, is induced in the treated recipients
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