von Lichtenberg F, Sher A, McIntyre S
Am J Pathol. 1977 Apr;87(1):105-23.
When mice are challenged intravenously with schistosomula of Schistosoma mansoni, host cell reaction and parasite attrition proceed entirely in the lung, where these events can be followed by quantitative histology and worm recovery. In nonimmune animals the destruction of schistosomula in the lungs proceeds gradually, resulting in the elimination of about 80% of the challenge organisms after 6 days. Cell reaction begins promptly, as evidenced by the appearance of neutrophilic foci around many of the lung schistosomula within 30 minutes after injection, and results in increasing numbers of damaged organisms and residual inflammatory foci 24 hours and 6 days later, respectively. In contrast, when schistosomula are injected into mice immune by virtue of an established S. mansoni infection, parasite destruction is augmented and accelerated, a process already evident by 24 hours. By the sixth day, 98% of the challenge organisms have been eliminated, a substantially greater reduction in parasite survival than that occurring in the normal host. This increased attrition of schistosomula is also reflected in the decreased numbers of parasites recovered from minced lung tissue of immune mice 6 days after challenge. Immune cellular inflammatory reactions to schistosomula are, likewise, greatly intensified and can be readily distinguished from those of normal mice by the proportions of parasites involved and by the large numbers of eosinophils surrounding them. In some instances, degranulation of eosinophils onto the parasite tegument is observed. Schistosomula cultured for 24 or 44 hours in a medium containing mouse red blood cells elicit significantly less cellular reaction and show greater survival in the lungs of immune animals than do freshly derived schistosomula. It would therefore appear that the susceptibility of maturing schistosomes to immune cellular attack is limited to the first day or two after their metamorphosis from cercariae. These observations form the framework of a new in vivo model for analyzing the dynamics of the cellular and humoral processes involved in the immune destruction of a metazoan parasite. The model also lends itself to studies of the immunologic interrelationships between innate and acquired resistance to infection with schistosomes, as well as the mechanisms by which these parasites evade the host immune response.
当用曼氏血吸虫的童虫经静脉感染小鼠时,宿主细胞反应和寄生虫损耗完全发生在肺部,通过定量组织学和虫体回收可以追踪这些过程。在非免疫动物中,肺部童虫的破坏是逐渐发生的,6天后约80%的攻击虫体被清除。细胞反应迅速开始,注射后30分钟内许多肺内童虫周围出现嗜中性粒细胞灶即可证明,24小时和6天后分别导致受损虫体数量增加和残留炎症灶增多。相比之下,当将童虫注射到因已建立曼氏血吸虫感染而免疫的小鼠体内时,寄生虫破坏会增强并加速,这个过程在24小时时就已明显。到第6天,98%的攻击虫体已被清除,寄生虫存活率的降低幅度明显大于正常宿主。童虫损耗的增加也反映在攻击6天后从免疫小鼠切碎的肺组织中回收的寄生虫数量减少。对童虫的免疫细胞炎症反应同样大大增强,通过涉及的寄生虫比例以及围绕它们的大量嗜酸性粒细胞,可以很容易地与正常小鼠的反应区分开来。在某些情况下,观察到嗜酸性粒细胞向寄生虫体表脱颗粒。在含有小鼠红细胞的培养基中培养24或44小时的童虫,与新鲜获得的童虫相比,在免疫动物的肺部引起的细胞反应明显较少,并且存活率更高。因此,似乎成熟血吸虫对免疫细胞攻击的易感性仅限于它们从尾蚴变态后的头一两天。这些观察结果构成了一个新的体内模型的框架,用于分析参与后生动物寄生虫免疫破坏的细胞和体液过程的动态。该模型也适用于研究对血吸虫感染的先天和后天抵抗力之间的免疫相互关系,以及这些寄生虫逃避宿主免疫反应的机制。