Mansfield J M, Wallace J H
Infect Immun. 1974 Aug;10(2):335-9. doi: 10.1128/iai.10.2.335-339.1974.
Adult New Zealand white rabbits were experimentally infected with a parasitic African hemoflagellate, Trypanosoma congolense, and were subsequently tested for in vivo and in vitro aspects of cell-mediated immune function. Chronically infected rabbits were sensitized to mycobacterial protein and skin-tested with purified protein derivative; all infected animals demonstrated much milder skin-test responses to antigen than control groups. Similarly, peripheral blood lymphocyte responses in vitro to purified protein derivative and, as well, to phytohemagglutinin were markedly suppressed. Supernatant fluids of antigen-stimulated lymph node cell cultures from T. congolense-infected rabbits failed to demonstrate migration inhibitory factor activity but did possess normal levels of blastogenic factor activity. An active infection was necessary for demonstration of suppressed immune responses, and components present in infected rabbit serum were apparently not responsible for the observed abnormalities. Suppression of T-lymphocyte subpopulations may well explain the occurrence of numerous immunological aberrations arising during human and animal infections with the African trypanosomes.
成年新西兰白兔被实验性感染一种寄生性非洲血鞭毛虫——刚果锥虫,随后对其细胞介导免疫功能的体内和体外方面进行检测。慢性感染的兔子对分枝杆菌蛋白致敏,并用纯化蛋白衍生物进行皮肤试验;所有感染动物对抗原的皮肤试验反应比对照组温和得多。同样,外周血淋巴细胞在体外对纯化蛋白衍生物以及植物血凝素的反应也明显受到抑制。来自感染刚果锥虫兔子的抗原刺激淋巴结细胞培养物的上清液未能显示迁移抑制因子活性,但确实具有正常水平的促有丝分裂因子活性。活跃感染对于显示免疫反应受抑制是必要的,感染兔子血清中存在的成分显然不是观察到的异常现象的原因。T淋巴细胞亚群的抑制很可能解释了人类和动物感染非洲锥虫期间出现的众多免疫异常现象的发生。