| Literature DB >> 924522 |
E J Ruitenberg, A Elgersma, W Kruizinga, F Leenstra.
Abstract
In six experiments the course of a Trichinella spiralis infection in congenitally athymic (nu/nu) mice and their heterozygous thymus-bearing littermates (+/nu) was followed. In the +/nu mice worms were expelled at day 10 post infection. In nu/nu mice worms remained in the intestine until the end of the observation period (83 days post infection). In testing the yield of muscle larvae in +/nu and nu/nu mice 4--5 times more muscle larvae were isolated from nu/nu mice than from infected +/nu mice. The following phenomena were observed in +/nu mice only: anti-T. spiralis antibodies detected by immunofluorescence, intestinal plasma-cell production and intestinal eosinophilia. In nu/nu mice no blood eosinophilia was observed in contrast to the induction of eosinophilia both in infected +/nu and infected nu/nu mice reconstituted with thymuses from heterozygous littermates. Intra-epithelial lymphocytes, more numerous in +/nu than in nu/nu mice, were not attracted by Trichinella antigen. The data supported the hypothesis that worm expulsion is a T cell-dependent phenomenon. Plasma cell and antibody production as well as tissue and blood eosinophilia were shown to be thymus-dependent in a T. spiralis infection.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1977 PMID: 924522 PMCID: PMC1445397
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Immunology ISSN: 0019-2805 Impact factor: 7.397