Brown W C, Sugimoto C, Conrad P A, Grab D J
International Laboratory for Research on Animal Diseases (ILRAD), Nairobi, Kenya.
Parasite Immunol. 1989 Nov;11(6):567-83. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-3024.1989.tb00921.x.
T-cell lines generated from Theileria parva-immune cattle were used to identify antigens associated with schizont-infected lymphoblastoid cells. Homogenates prepared from T. parva-infected cells were fractionated by differential centrifugation, and antigenically distinct soluble and membrane-bound antigens were detected by the differential stimulation of cell lines derived from two animals. Activity in the soluble fraction was not attributable to either a mitogen or interleukin 2. Activity in the membrane fraction was associated with schizont membranes as indicated by the presence in this fraction of a parasite protein detected by immunoblot analysis using a schizont-specific monoclonal antibody. Elimination of intracellular schizonts over time, using the anti-theilerial drug, parvaquone, resulted in a concomitant loss of antigenicity in infected cells and in subcellular fractions prepared from drug-treated cells, demonstrating that stimulation of Theileria-specific helper and cytotoxic T-cell responses is associated with the presence of the parasite.