Depressed antibody responses to a thymus-dependent antigen in toxoplasmosis. |
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Authors: | G T Strickland and P C Sayles |
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Abstract: | The immunodepressive effect of Toxoplasma gondii infection in mice was studied, using sheep erythrocytes (SRBC) as the testing antigen and serum hemagglutinins, hemolysins, and both direct and indirect splenic plaque-forming cells (PFC) to SRBC as assays. In the primary antibody response, immunoglobulin M (IgM), hemagglutinins, and hemolysins and both IgM- and IgG-secreting PFC were depressed in animals immunized after infection. Maximum immunodepression occurred during the first 3 weeks of Toxoplasma infection. When the secondary antibody response was studied, results varied. Mice immunized with SRBC after being infected with T. gondii had a depression in both IgM and IgG PFC. Mice immunized with SRBC before being infected with T. gondii and then given a challenge dose of SRBC had a delay, but no an actual depression, in IgG hemagglutinins and hemolysins and IgG-secreting PFC. These studies show that the immunodepression associated with Toxoplasma infection is complicated, and they provide no definitive explanation for the mechanism. |
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