학술논문

Theileria annulata induces abberrant T cell activation in vitro and in vivo.
Document Type
Article
Source
Clinical & Experimental Immunology. Feb1995, Vol. 99 Issue 2, p203-210. 8p.
Subject
*LYMPHOCYTES
*T cells
*LYMPH nodes
*IMMUNOLOGY
*KILLER cells
*LYMPHOID tissue
Language
ISSN
0009-9104
Abstract
The protozoan parasite of cattle, Theileria annulata, causes a severe lymphoproliferative disease, developing initially in the draining lymph node, which is often fatal in naive animals. Infection of macrophages with T. annulata leads lo an augmentation of their antigen-presenting capability in vitro and infected cells can induce proliferation of autologous resting T cells from naive animals. This inappropriate activation of T cells may play an important role in the failure of the host to mount an effective immune response in vivo. To investigate this hypothesis we characterized further the response of T cells from naive cattle to infected cells in vitro, and also examined the development of the immune response in lymph nodes draining the sites of T. annulata infection. Both CD4+ and CD8+ T cells from naive peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) were induced to proliferate and express the activation markers IL-2R and MHC class II when cultured with infected cells. This effect was seen in both "naive' and "memory" T cells, and was dependent upon contact with infected cells. In vitro, infected cells are therefore capable of activating T cells irrespective of their antigen specificity or memory status. In draining lymph nodes, although large numbers of IL-2R+ cells developed following infection, these activated cells were only associated with areas of parasite-induced proliferating cells, and subsequently disappeared from the node. Cells expressing IL-2R were not present in recognized sites for T cell development. Germinal centres were severely affected, losing T cell-dependent zones followed by a total destruction of morphology. T cell function is therefore severely disrupted within draining nodes. This study has shown that parasitized cells supply sufficient signals in vitro to activate T cells irrespective of specificity. T cells also are not stimulated in a conventional manner in vivo, and this may play an important role in preventing an effective immune response from being generated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]