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Cutaneous leishmaniasis. The defect in T cell influx in BALB/c mice

Local cellular responses to cutaneous infection with Leishmania mexicana amazonensis were examined in susceptible (BALB/c) and resistant (C57BL/6) mouse strains by immunocytochemical and electron microscopic studies. Infection during the first 8 wk in both animal strains was characterized by progres...

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Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1987
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Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2188518/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/3546576
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description Local cellular responses to cutaneous infection with Leishmania mexicana amazonensis were examined in susceptible (BALB/c) and resistant (C57BL/6) mouse strains by immunocytochemical and electron microscopic studies. Infection during the first 8 wk in both animal strains was characterized by progressively enlarging lesions, epidermal thickening and ulceration, and accumulation of eosinophils and Ia+ infected macrophages. Healing of C57BL/6 mouse lesions began after 12 wk of infection and was associated with local influx of both Th (L3T4+) and T cytotoxic/suppressor (Lyt-2+) cells into the dermis, and Ia antigen expression on epidermal keratinocytes. T lymphocyte infiltration was marked and intracellular parasites were scarce by 21 wk of C57BL/6 infection. Similarly, granulomas in C57BL/6 livers contained L3T4+ and Lyt-2+ T lymphocytes and no visible intracellular parasites by 21 wk of infection. In contrast, BALB/c mouse lesions continued to enlarge and never healed. Throughout the entire course of infection, T lymphocyte influx into the heavily infected dermis was minimal. Keratinocyte Ia expression was absent in BALB/c lesions. BALB/c livers were heavily infected by 18 wk of cutaneous infection, with few demonstrable T lymphocytes. A systemic absence of T cells could not be demonstrated in BALB/c mice. Both L3T4+ and Lyt-2+ T cells were found in the peripheral blood in normal numbers in both mouse strains. Our results support the role of T cells as important local effector cells in the healing response of murine cutaneous leishmaniasis. We suggest that local T lymphocyte infiltration may provide lymphokines, particularly IFN-gamma, that can activate infected macrophages to destroy the intracellular parasites. Alternatively, T cells may play a cytotoxic role, killing infected macrophages and allowing local humoral factors to destroy released extracellular parasites.
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spelling pubmed-21885182008-04-17 Cutaneous leishmaniasis. The defect in T cell influx in BALB/c mice J Exp Med Articles Local cellular responses to cutaneous infection with Leishmania mexicana amazonensis were examined in susceptible (BALB/c) and resistant (C57BL/6) mouse strains by immunocytochemical and electron microscopic studies. Infection during the first 8 wk in both animal strains was characterized by progressively enlarging lesions, epidermal thickening and ulceration, and accumulation of eosinophils and Ia+ infected macrophages. Healing of C57BL/6 mouse lesions began after 12 wk of infection and was associated with local influx of both Th (L3T4+) and T cytotoxic/suppressor (Lyt-2+) cells into the dermis, and Ia antigen expression on epidermal keratinocytes. T lymphocyte infiltration was marked and intracellular parasites were scarce by 21 wk of C57BL/6 infection. Similarly, granulomas in C57BL/6 livers contained L3T4+ and Lyt-2+ T lymphocytes and no visible intracellular parasites by 21 wk of infection. In contrast, BALB/c mouse lesions continued to enlarge and never healed. Throughout the entire course of infection, T lymphocyte influx into the heavily infected dermis was minimal. Keratinocyte Ia expression was absent in BALB/c lesions. BALB/c livers were heavily infected by 18 wk of cutaneous infection, with few demonstrable T lymphocytes. A systemic absence of T cells could not be demonstrated in BALB/c mice. Both L3T4+ and Lyt-2+ T cells were found in the peripheral blood in normal numbers in both mouse strains. Our results support the role of T cells as important local effector cells in the healing response of murine cutaneous leishmaniasis. We suggest that local T lymphocyte infiltration may provide lymphokines, particularly IFN-gamma, that can activate infected macrophages to destroy the intracellular parasites. Alternatively, T cells may play a cytotoxic role, killing infected macrophages and allowing local humoral factors to destroy released extracellular parasites. The Rockefeller University Press 1987-02-01 /pmc/articles/PMC2188518/ /pubmed/3546576 Text en This article is distributed under the terms of an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike–No Mirror Sites license for the first six months after the publication date (see http://www.rupress.org/terms). After six months it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 4.0 Unported license, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/).
spellingShingle Articles
Cutaneous leishmaniasis. The defect in T cell influx in BALB/c mice
title Cutaneous leishmaniasis. The defect in T cell influx in BALB/c mice
title_full Cutaneous leishmaniasis. The defect in T cell influx in BALB/c mice
title_fullStr Cutaneous leishmaniasis. The defect in T cell influx in BALB/c mice
title_full_unstemmed Cutaneous leishmaniasis. The defect in T cell influx in BALB/c mice
title_short Cutaneous leishmaniasis. The defect in T cell influx in BALB/c mice
title_sort cutaneous leishmaniasis. the defect in t cell influx in balb/c mice
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2188518/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/3546576