Affiliation:
1. Laboratoire d'Immunopathologie Cellulaire des Maladies Infectieuses, UMR 8527,1 and
2. Laboratoire de Synthèse, Structure, et Fonction des Biomolécules, UMR 8525,2 Institut de Biologie, F-59021 Lille, France
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Genetic factors that might influence susceptibility or resistance in naive individuals and early-stage pathology in schistosomiasis are difficult to study in clinical trials, since in areas where the disease is endemic the first contact with the parasite occurs most often at very early ages. Therefore, four strains (DR1.Aβ°, DR2.Aβ°, DQ8.Aβ°, and DQ6.Aβ°) of major histocompatibility complex class II-deficient mice (Aβ°), transgenic for different HLA alleles, have been used to evaluate the potential role of HLA class II polymorphism in the onset of the infection by
Schistosoma mansoni
. The survival rates and parasitological and immunological parameters after infection were evaluated and compared against the control values obtained with Aβ° mice. All four mouse strains used in this study were able to generate a specific immune response against
S. mansoni
antigens (cytokine production and antibody production). However, only mice expressing DR alleles survived until the chronic stage of the infection and were able to mount protective granulomatous response avoiding hepatic damage, presenting predominant gamma interferon production. In contrast, strains expressing DQ alleles revealed an impairment in generating effective granulomas, resulting in earlier death, which was associated with an impaired hepatic granulomatous response and liquefactic necrosis, reflecting the influence of HLA polymorphism in the establishment of protective response in the early stage of infection.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
Cited by
8 articles.
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