Tarleton R L, Grusby M J, Postan M, Glimcher L H
Department of Cellular Biology, University of Georgia, Athens, GA 30602, USA.
Int Immunol. 1996 Jan;8(1):13-22. doi: 10.1093/intimm/8.1.13.
The role of T cell population in immune control of Trypanosoma cruzi infection and subsequent development of disease has been examined using gene knockout mice deficient in the expression of either or both class I and Class II MHC. Mice deficient in either class I- or class II-restricted T cell populations show a striking similarity in their mortality rate, parasite load and tissue inflammatory response following infection with the Brazil strain of T. cruzi. In both cases all animals died during the acute phase of the infection with high parasitemias and high parasite loads in the heart and skeletal muscle, but with reduced tissue inflammatory response. Mice deficient in both class I and class II MHC expression demonstrated even higher numbers of circulating and tissue parasites, essentially non-existent tissue inflammatory responses, and succumbed to infection earlier than single-deficient mice. MHC class I-deficient mice which survive into the chronic phase following infection with the M/78 or M/80 clones of T. cruzi have both relatively higher tissue parasite loads and more extensive and severe inflammatory responses than control immunocompetent mice. Immunologically, the acute infection in the double-deficient mice was accompanied by a marked increase in CD4(-)CD8(-)alphabetaTCR+ cells in the spleen. Surprisingly, both class I- and class II-deficient mice produce detectable but sub-normal levels of anti-parasite antibodies while double-deficient mice produced little to no detectable anti-parasite antibody. These results establish the importance of both class I- and class II-restricted T cells in immune control of circulating blood stages and intracellular states of T. cruzi. In addition, this work reinforces the relationship between tissue parasite load and the severity of the inflammatory lesions in chronically infected animals.
利用缺乏I类和II类主要组织相容性复合体(MHC)表达的基因敲除小鼠,研究了T细胞群体在克氏锥虫感染的免疫控制及随后疾病发展中的作用。缺乏I类或II类限制性T细胞群体的小鼠在感染巴西株克氏锥虫后的死亡率、寄生虫负荷和组织炎症反应方面表现出惊人的相似性。在这两种情况下,所有动物在感染急性期死亡,心脏和骨骼肌中出现高寄生虫血症和高寄生虫负荷,但组织炎症反应减弱。缺乏I类和II类MHC表达的小鼠循环和组织中的寄生虫数量甚至更高,基本不存在组织炎症反应,并且比单缺陷小鼠更早死于感染。感染克氏锥虫M/78或M/80克隆后存活至慢性期的I类MHC缺陷小鼠,其组织寄生虫负荷相对较高,炎症反应比对照免疫健全小鼠更广泛、更严重。在免疫方面,双缺陷小鼠的急性感染伴随着脾脏中CD4(-)CD8(-)alphabetaTCR+细胞的显著增加。令人惊讶的是,I类和II类缺陷小鼠均产生可检测但低于正常水平的抗寄生虫抗体,而双缺陷小鼠几乎不产生或不产生可检测的抗寄生虫抗体。这些结果证实了I类和II类限制性T细胞在克氏锥虫循环血液阶段和细胞内状态的免疫控制中的重要性。此外,这项工作强化了慢性感染动物组织寄生虫负荷与炎症病变严重程度之间的关系。