Immunization of susceptible hosts with a soluble antigen fraction from Leishmania major leads to aggravation of murine leishmaniasis mediated by CD4+ T cells

1990 
This study was performed in order to define Leishmania major antigens that function as disease-modulating immunogens in susceptible BALB/c mice. A soluble leishmanial antigen preparation (S-SLA) derived from highly infective stationary-phase L. major parasites was fractionated by preparative gel electrophoresis. In vitro, the low molecular mass fraction (<31 kDa) of S-SLA fraction D (FR D) was found to be a potent stimulator of L. major-specific Th1 and Th2 helper cell clones. In vivo, immunization with FR D induced a Th2-biased immune response in BALB/c mice as determined by the numbers of splenic CD4+ cells secreting interleukin 4 and interferon-γ according to limiting dilution analyses. In addition, FR D caused significant disease exacerbation in parasiteinfected susceptible mice as assessed by the local lesion development and the numbers of parasites in lymph nodes and spleen. This effect was observed after local subcutaneous application of FR D as well as after systemic immunization (intrasplenic or intraperitoneal). Transfer experiments revealed, that the disease-aggravating effect of FR D was mediated by CD4+ T cells. From these results it is concluded that leishmanial protein preparations exist that not only fail to induce protective antiparasitic immunity, but can mediate disease exacerbation, independently of the primary application site of the immunogen. The existence of such structures may serve the parasite as a means to evade the host's immune attack and may also have implications for the development of vaccines.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    40
    References
    26
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []