Büscher G, Morrison W I, Nelson R T
Vet Parasitol. 1984 Jul;15(1):29-38. doi: 10.1016/0304-4017(84)90107-9.
Cell lines infected with Theileria parva were derived by infection of bovine peripheral blood lymphocytes with sporozoites in vitro. Cattle were inoculated with doses of autologous infected cells ranging from 1 X 10(1) to 1 X 10(8). Infection became established in animals which received 1 X 10(2) or more cells. While 1 X 10(2) cells resulted in sub-patent infection with development of immunity to challenge with sporozoites, larger doses of cells gave rise to patent infections of increasing severity. Thus, doses of 1 X 10(5) and 1 X 10(6) cells sometimes produced lethal infections and with 1 X 10(7) and 1 X 10(8) the outcome was invariably lethal. Based on the previous observation that induction of immunity by allogeneic cells requires transfer of infection into the recipient-host cells, a comparison of the infections produced by autologous and allogeneic cells indicated that the transfer of infection from allogeneic cells occurs at a frequency of maximally 1 X 10(-5). Two pairs of cattle were identified as being mutually non-reactive in the mixed leukocyte reaction (MLR). Doses of 1 X 10(6) and 1 X 10(7) cells of cell lines derived from 1 animal of each pair were inoculated into the autologous host, the non-reactive partner and an animal which was shown to be strongly reactive to the donor in the MLR. In each instance, the reaction in the MLR non-reactive recipient was not significantly different from that of the MLR reactive recipient, but was markedly different from that of the autologous recipient.