Induction of delayed-type hypersensitivity to Leishmania major and the concomitant acceleration of disease development in progressive murine cutaneous leishmaniasis.

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RESUMO

BALB/c mice injected intradermally with 10(5) or higher doses of formaldehyde-fixed promastigotes (FFP) of Leishmania major developed strong delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) to leishmanial antigens injected into the hind footpad 3 to 10 days later. The DTH peaked 15 to 18 h after footpad injection and disappeared by 48 h. This specific DTH correlated with the homing of 51Cr-labeled syngeneic bone marrow cells and the infiltration of proliferating cells to the site of antigen administration. Spleen cells from FFP-sensitized mice also gave significant proliferative response to FFP in vitro. The DTH was adoptively transferable by Lyt-1+2-L3T4+ T cells and was H-2 restricted. DTH could be substantially enhanced by pretreatment with cyclophosphamide or pertussigen. Such DTH enhancement was accompanied by concomitant exacerbation of disease progression after L. major infection. Mice injected intravenously with FFP developed substantial immunity to cutaneous leishmaniasis but specifically suppressed DTH reactivity. Treatment of mice with pertussigen before intravenous immunization, however, abolished the protection and reversed the suppression of DTH. These results therefore demonstrate that the early-appearing type of DTH is not involved in host protection but that it actually facilitates disease progression in cutaneous leishmaniasis. Further evidence, which also shows the nonspecific nature of this disease exacerbation, is provided by local cell transfer experiments. Splenic T cells from mice sensitized to keyhole limpet hemocyanin or FFP induced significantly larger lesions compared with normal T cells when they were transferred into the footpad together with specific antigen and L. major promastigotes.

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