Affiliation:
1. Department of Surgery, University of Wisconsin Medical School, Madison 53706-1532, USA.
Abstract
beta2-Microglobulin knockout (beta2m-/-) mice, which lack major histocompatibility complex class I expression and are deficient in CD8alpha/beta T-cell receptor alpha/beta (TcRalpha/beta) T cells, were as resistant to systemic (intravenous) challenge with Candida albicans as immunocompetent controls. Conversely, the beta2m-/- mutant mice were susceptible to systemic candidiasis of endogenous origin despite the induction of C. albicans-specific antibody and cell-mediated immune responses after colonization with a pure culture of C. albicans. Despite some superficial and transient infections of tongues and esophagi (detected by histology) at 1 to 2 weeks after oral colonization and gastric infections (cardia-antrum section) which were observed at 10 to 12 weeks after oral challenge, C. albicans-colonized beta2m-/- mice showed an overall resistance to candidiasis in other mucosal and cutaneous tissues. These data suggest that immune defects that accompany the loss of beta2-microglobulin play an important role in murine resistance to gastric and disseminated candidiasis of endogenous (intestinal tract) origin and that innate immunity and CD4 TcRalpha/beta as well as CD8alpha/alpha TcRalpha/beta (or -gamma/delta) T cells play an important role in resistance to systemic, cutaneous, and nongastric mucosal tissues.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
Cited by
19 articles.
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