Cellular aspects of the longer-lasting immunity against mouse typhoid infection afforded by the live-cell and ribosomal vaccines.

1986 
In order to compare the potential of salmonella vaccines prepared from Salmonella typhimurium to provide the longer-lasting protection from the aspects of cell-mediated immunity, groups of mice were immunized with optimal doses of the following preparations: live cells, ribosome-rich extract, acetone-killed cells, and heat-killed cells. At various intervals post-immunization, mouse peritoneal macrophages and splenic T cells were tested for biological activities. The capacity of each vaccine to confer mouse protection against a lethal challenge with S. typhimurium correlated with the degree of macrophage activation engendered by each of them in the early stage of immunization. In the late stage of immunization, the level of mouse protection conferred by each vaccine was found to be based on the capacity of T cells to respond to salmonella antigens, which correlated with the degree of adoptive immunity by T cells. The live-cell and ribosomal vaccines were superior to killed-cell vaccines in inducing the cell-mediated protection. Thus, the longer-lasting immunity provided by the live-cell and ribosomal vaccines can be accounted for by the fact that T cells of mice immunized with both vaccines have the persistent reactivity to salmonella antigens.
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