Humoral immune response to chlamydial genital infection of mice with the agent of mouse pneumonitis.

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RESUMO

The objective of this study was to characterize the humoral immune response to chlamydial genital infection of mice with the mouse pneumonitis agent (MoPn). With an enzyme-linked immunoabsorbent assay, immunoglobulin G antibodies to MoPn were first detected in plasma by day 14. Peak plasma antibody concentrations were reached by day 49, and this response did not decline significantly throughout the 300-day monitoring period. Immunoglobulin A against MoPn could first be detected in pooled vaginal washes by day 21 after infection and had reached peak concentrations by day 28, but anti-MoPn immunoglobulin G was not consistently present in secretions. The antibody response in secretions had declined slightly by day 300. Immunoblot analysis revealed that the early phase of the plasma antibody response to MoPn as a result of genital infection was against lipopolysaccharide, the major outer membrane protein, and a 62-kilodalton (kDa) protein. In secretions, early-phase immunoglobulin A antibodies were directed to the major outer membrane protein and lipopolysaccharide. Late reactions to 15-, 22-, and 83-kDa proteins in plasma were noted. Late reactions to the 62-kDa protein in secretions were also noted. The cause of these late responses remains unexplained. When mice were challenged intravaginally with MoPn at 50-day intervals after the primary infection, it was found that mice inoculated on day 100 or after were susceptible to reinfection. Susceptibility could not be related to a decline in the antibody concentration in plasma or secretions or in the antibody response to specific components of MoPn as measured by immunoblot analysis.

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