用不同数量的抗原免疫小鼠皮肤利什曼病的不同免疫状态:产生有益的、潜在有害的、有害的和潜在极有害的状态。

Behring Institute Mitteilungen Pub Date : 1997-02-01
P A Bretscher, O Ogunremi, J N Menon
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引用次数: 0

摘要

BALB/c小鼠感染标准和大量利什曼原虫主要寄生虫后,诱导寄生虫特异性Th2反应,导致疾病进展。在此基础上,这些老鼠被指定为“易感”老鼠。我们发现不同类型的免疫反应可以在“易感”BALB/c小鼠中产生,这取决于用于感染的寄生虫的数量,并且这种不同反应的病理生理后果是截然不同的。极少量的寄生虫感染导致细胞介导的Th1反应的完全诱导,并产生对标准和实质性挑战的抗性。来自这些抗性小鼠的脾脏细胞在转移到正常小鼠身上时可以赋予抗性,但这些脾脏细胞不含表达DTH或Th1效应细胞的T细胞,这些T细胞在与寄生虫抗原短期培养(48小时)时产生IFN γ。在这种情况下,免疫反应似乎导致了从感染部位引流的淋巴结和受感染小鼠的寄生虫的虚拟消除。我们认为,这种消除导致缺乏抗原刺激和效应T细胞,并且“记忆Th1细胞”负责脾细胞赋予正常小鼠抵抗力的能力。我们预测这些小鼠在免疫抑制后不会出现寄生虫病,即不容易发生再激活疾病。这就是“有益状态”。与这种寄生虫数量很少的感染相反,寄生虫数量很少的感染通常会导致两种状态之一:(i)产生Th2成分非常少的反应,产生少量抗体,慢性寄生虫血症,因此慢性产生寄生虫特异性效应Th1/Th2细胞,或(ii)产生Th2成分较大的反应,产生更多抗体,形成明显病变,长期产生稳定的混合Th1/Th2反应。我们把后一种状态称为边缘性利什曼病,类似于边缘性麻风病。在这两种情况下,寄生虫都可以在感染几个月后从引流淋巴结中恢复。因此,我们认为,感染少量寄生虫的小鼠,携带慢性亚临床感染,将在免疫抑制后遭受再激活疾病,因此我们将产生的状态指定为潜在有害的。我们认为患有边缘性疾病的小鼠处于有害状态。用高剂量寄生虫抗原免疫的小鼠长期产生Th2反应,而用低剂量免疫的小鼠产生Th1反应。免疫产生Th2反应的小鼠随后被通常包含的极少数寄生虫感染。Th2反应的产生导致Th2印记的产生,使得对低剂量感染的反应从Th1模式调节到Th2模式,导致疾病的进行性发展。我们认为,免疫接种/疫苗接种导致保护性反应偏离非保护性模式的状态,可能导致流行病。这种状态有可能是极其有害的。
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Distinct immunological states in murine cutaneous leishmaniasis by immunising with different amounts of antigen: the generation of beneficial, potentially harmful, harmful and potentially extremely harmful states.

Infection of BALB/c mice with a standard and substantial number of Leishmania major parasites results in progressive disease, following the induction of a parasite-specific Th2 response. These mice have been designated as "susceptible" on this basis. We show that distinct types of immune response can be generated in "susceptible" BALB/c mice depending upon the number of parasites employed for infection, and that the pathophysiological consequences of such distinct responses are dramatically different. Infection with very low numbers of parasites results in the exclusive induction of a cell-mediated, Th1 response, and the generation of resistance to the standard and substantial challenge. Spleen cells from such resistant mice can confer resistance upon normal mice when transferred to them, but these spleen cells do not contain T cells expressing DTH or Th1 effector cells that produce IFN gamma on short term culture (48 hrs) with parasite antigen. The immune response in this case appears to result in the virtual elimination of parasites from the lymph node draining the site of infection and, by implication, from the infected mouse. We suggest that such elimination results in the absence of antigen stimulation and hence of effector T cells, and that "memory Th1 cells" are responsible for the capacity of spleen cells to confer resistance on normal mice. We predict such mice will not suffer parasitemia upon immune suppression, i.e. are not susceptible to reactivation disease. This is the "beneficial state". In contrast to this infection with a very low number of parasites infection with a low number usually results in one of two states: (i) The generation of a response with a very small Th2 component, production of a small amount of antibody, chronic parasitemia and hence chronic generation of parasite-specific effector Th1/Th2 cells, or (ii) The generation of a response with a greater Th2 component, the production of more antibody, the formation of a frank lesion, and the long term generation of a stable, mixed Th1/Th2 response. We refer to the latter state as borderline leishmaniasis in analogy with borderline leprosy. Parasites can be recovered from the draining lymph node in both these cases many months after infection. We therefore believe that mice infected with a low number of parasites, that harbour a chronic subclinical infection, will suffer reactivation disease upon immune suppression, and we consequently designate the state generated as potentially harmful. We consider mice with borderline disease to be in a harmful state. Mice immunised with high doses of parasite antigen produce in the long term Th2 responses, whereas those immunised with lower doses produce Th1 responses. Mice immunised to produce a Th2 response were subsequently infected with a very low number of parasites that is normally contained. The generation of a Th2 response results in the generation of a Th2 imprint, such that the response to the low dose infection is modulated from a Th1 to a Th2 mode, resulting in progressive disease. We argue that immunisation/vaccination, resulting in a state that deviates the protective response to a non-protective mode, may result in epidemics. Such a state has the potential for being extremely harmful.

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