Abstract: | Mice vaccinated with a formalin-fixed preparation of either Plasmodium berghei or P. yoelli exhibited delayed type hypersensitivity (DTH) to the homologous antigen. This manifested itself in increased delayed thickening of antigen-challenged pinnae of the vaccinated mice as compared to the non-vaccinated controls. DTH was also evident in the vaccinated mice using the homing of radio-labelled bone marrow cells (BMC) to the delayed lesion as a criterion of reactivity. When P. yoelii vaccinated mice were given a live infection P. yoelii, a marked migration of BMC into the spleen occurred, with a peak at 48 hr, and it is suggested that this was a systemic response of DTH. The splenic T-cells of P. yoelii-vaccinated animals transformed in vitro with a soluble extract of the homologous parasite. The potential function of cell-mediated mechanisms in immunity to malarial infections is discussed. |