Modulation of the phenotype and function of bovine afferent lymph cells during infection with Trypanosoma congolense

1994 
Abstract Alterations in the phenotype and function of cells isolated from bovine afferent lymph were studied following tsetse-transmitted Trypanosoma congolense infection. Little alteration was observed in the output of the CD2 + T cells in the lymph, and within this population the CD4:CD8 ratio remained relatively constant. By contrast, a marked decrease was observed in the output of γδ T cells over the first 7 days following infection. The number of B cells increased between 2 and 6 days post-infection, and thereafter returned to pre-infection values. Little change was observed within the afferent lymph veiled cell population. Examination of activation markers on the lymphocyte fraction of afferent lymph revealed a decrease in the number of cells expressing the Interleukin-2 receptor α-chain from Day 5 post-infection. At this time the expression of ACT 1, another early activation marker, was seen to increase. Afferent lymph cells collected pre-infection and on the first 4 days post-infection proliferated in response to stimulation with Concanavalin A in vitro. This response to mitogenic stimulation was completely abrogated from day five post-infection. However, these cells were not capable of suppressing the capacity of normal peripheral blood mononuclear cells to respond to mitogenic stimulus in co-culture assays. These studies suggest that although a degree of lymphocyte activation occurs in the afferent lymph following tsetse-transmitted infection with T. congolense , this may be sub-optimal owing to the immunosuppression which appears to operate at the level of the skin and the lymph nodes.
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