Affiliation:
1. Department of Medical Microbiology and Immunology, The Texas A&M University System-Health Science Center
2. Laboratory of Molecular Immunoregulation, National Cancer Institute,Frederick, Maryland 21702
3. College of Veterinary Medicine, Texas A&M University, College
Station, Texas 77843
Abstract
ABSTRACT
In
this study, we focused on three leukocyte-rich guinea pig cell
populations, bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) cells, resident peritoneal
cells (PC), and splenocytes (SPC). BAL cells, SPC, and PC were
stimulated either with live attenuated
Mycobacterium
tuberculosis
H37Ra or with live or heat-killed virulent
M.
tuberculosis
H37Rv (multiplicity of infection of 1:100). Each cell
population was determined to proliferate in response to heat-killed
virulent H37Rv, whereas no measurable proliferative response could be
detected upon stimulation with live mycobacteria. Additionally, this
proliferative capacity (in SPC and PC populations) was significantly
enhanced upon prior vaccination with
Mycobacterium bovis
BCG.
Accordingly, in a parallel set of experiments we found a strong
positive correlation between production of antigen-specific bioactive
tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α) and prior vaccination with
BCG. A nonspecific stimulus, lipopolysaccharide, failed to induce this
effect on BAL cells, SPC, and PC. These results showed that production
of bioactive TNF-α from mycobacterium-stimulated guinea pig
cell cultures positively correlates with the vaccination status of the
host and with the virulence of the mycobacterial
strain.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
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