Intestinal mast cell response and mucosal defence against Strongyloides venezuelensis in interleukin-3-hyporesponsive mice

2002 
SUMMARY Recently several inbred strains of mice were found to be hyporesponsive to Interleukin (IL)-3 because of a 5-bp deletion in the intron 7 of the gene that encodes IL-3 receptor a subunit (IL-3Ra). Due to this mutation, mast cells were not generated in vitro from bone marrow cells of these mice under the presence of IL-3. Intestinal mucosal mast cells, of which growth/differentiation is dependent on IL-3, are important effector cells in immune-mediated expulsion of intestinal nematodes,Strongyloides spp. In the present study, therefore, we examined intestinal mast cell response and mucosal defence against Strongyloides venezuelensis in IL-3-hyporesponsive C58/J and A/J mice. After subcutaneous inoculation with 10 000 infective larvae, C58/J and IL-3-responsive C57BL/6 mice showed identical kinetic patterns of daily faecal egg output and intestinal mast cell response. When these mice were infected with 3000 L3 and, five weeks later, they were challenged by intraduodenal implantation of 800 S. venezuelensis adult worms, the timing of logarithmic decline of faecal egg count as well as intestinal mastocytosis was delayed for two days in C58/J mice. Kinetics of intestinal mastocytosis and faecal egg excretion after a primary and challenge infection in A/J mice, another IL-3-hyporesponsive strain, were identical with those seen in C58/J mice. These results suggest that intestinal mast cell response and mucosal defence against S. venezuelensis of the mutant mice were almost completely compensatedin vivo .P ossible mechanisms of induction of intestinal mast cell response in IL-3R adefective mice are discussed.
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