Mouse splenic CD4+ and CD8+ T cells undergo extensive apoptosis during a Plasmodium chabaudi chabaudi AS infection |
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Authors: | Luvia Sanchez-Torres,rea Rodriguez-Ropon,Maribel Aguilar-Medina,& Luis Favila-Castillo |
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Affiliation: | Department of Immunology, National School of Biological Sciences, IPN, Mexico City, Mexico. |
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Abstract: | The presence and phenotype of apoptotic lymphocytes was studied in spleen cell suspensions taken from CB6F1 mice infected with Plasmodium chabaudi chabaudi AS. High levels of apoptotic cells were found, associated with high parasitaemias and splenomegaly. This was also accompanied by expansion and disarray of spleen white pulp. Apoptosis levels lowered when parasitaemia was cleared, but were still higher than in normal mice. At this time, the spleen was diminishing in size and the white pulp was contracting and rearranging. When parasitaemia was patent, the cells most affected by apoptosis were CD4+ T cells followed by CD8+ T cells, and to a lesser extent B220+ B cells. When parasitaemia was cleared, CD8+ T cells and B220+ B cells returned to basal levels of apoptosis, while CD4+ T cells still had higher apoptosis levels than normal mice. A similar pattern of lymphocyte subpopulation apoptosis was found in infected BALB/c mice, despite the fact that, for this mouse model, it has been reported that B cells are the cells that are most affected by apoptosis. We consider that the high levels of apoptosis in CD4+ T cells when parasitaemias are still high are not easily explained by a normal mechanism of down regulation of the immune response. |
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Keywords: | apoptosis mouse malaria CD4+ T cells CD8+ T cells B cells Plasmodium chabaudi |
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