Cellular mechanisms in the immune response to malaria in Plasmodium vinckei-infected mice.

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RESUMO

Infection of mice with the malaria parasite Plasmodium vinckei vinckei is 100% lethal. However, after two infections followed by drug cure, BALB/c mice develop a solid immunity which is antibody independent but mediated by CD4+ T cells. To elucidate the mechanisms of this immunity, spleen cells from immune mice were challenged in vitro with lysates of P. vinckei-infected or uninfected erythrocytes. The parasite antigen induced proliferation of T cells from immune mice but not from nonimmune mice. When gamma interferon production by cells from immune mice was assayed at the single-cell level, 1 to 3 cells per 1,000 cells were found to release this cytokine when exposed to antigen. In contrast, the numbers of interleukin 4 (IL-4)-producing cells from both immune and control mice were < or = 4 per 10(6) cells, regardless of antigen exposure. Investigation in a bioassay showed that P. vinckei antigen induced the release of IL-4 from spleen cells of immune mice but not from those of control mice. Nevertheless, that IL-4 is of minor significance in this system is also suggested by the absence of elevation of immunoglobulin E levels in blood samples from these mice, in contrast to what is seen with P. chabaudi infection, in which IL-4-producing Th2 cells are of major importance for immunity during later phases of infection. Taken together, the present results indicate that immunity to P. vinckei is a Th1 response, with gamma interferon being an important protective factor. Whether or not the Th1 response, through overproduction of tumor necrosis factor alpha, is also responsible for pathology and death in this infection remains to be clarified.

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