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Query: UMLS:C0042961 (
volvulus
)
4,305
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Lipid extraction of adult O.
volvulus
worms using a chloroform/methanol/water mixture yielded 10 lipid fractions of which 8 were demonstrated by the orcinol reagent to be glycolipids. In TLC, two of these lipid fractions had mobilities similar to cholesterol and cholesterol ester (Rf.: 0.95, 0.86) whereas two others migrated as sphingomyelin and lecithin (Rf.: 0.40, 0.35) respectively. Other components migrated at intermediate positions. The glycolipids were immunologically active and reacted with sera from onchocerciasis patients. The highest reaction was obtained with the IgG antibody class, followed by IgM while no appreciable reactivity was observed with
IgE
. Sera from patients infected with other filariae such as Loa-loa and Dipetalonema perstans did not show any significant reaction with these antigens. The significance of these results is discussed.
...
PMID:Glycolipid antigens of adult O. volvulus reactive with patients sera from onchocerciasis endemic areas in Cameroon. 760 52
The increased incidence of "allergic" symptomatology and clinical complications seen in non-endemic individuals with loiasis, as compared to natives of endemic areas, is thought to reflect a heightened immune response to filarial antigens. To identify antigens involved in this hyperresponsiveness, a cDNA library constructed from adult female RNA from the related filarial parasite, Onchocerca
volvulus
, was screened with serum from a North American who acquired loiasis in West Africa. Sequence analysis of one of the identified clones, OvGalBP, revealed significant homology to the vertebrate S-type lectins, a family of thiol-dependent, metal-independent galactoside binding lectins, which includes an IgE-binding protein thought to be involved in
IgE
regulation. The 1100-bp insert of OvGalBP contains the entire protein coding region and has a 3' poly(A) tail. The two amino acid consensus sequences (WGxExR and HFNPRF) found in all of the S-type lectins are present. Purified recombinant protein expressed as a fusion with glutathione-S-transferase (OvGalBP-GST) was recognized by sera from a majority of filaria-infected patients but not by putatively immune individuals from an endemic area or by unexposed endemic and non-endemic controls. Interestingly, OvGalBP-GST specifically bound
IgE
(and not IgG) in a lactose-inhibitable manner, suggesting a potential role for this protein in the pathophysiology of human filarial infection.
...
PMID:OvGalBP, a filarial antigen with homology to vertebrate galactoside-binding proteins. 796 71
To characterize the clinical and laboratory features of onchocerciasis in visitors to endemic areas and to compare them with those seen in endemic subjects, 20 returned visitors and 21 endemic subjects with onchocerciasis were evaluated. Dermatitis was the most frequent clinical finding among the returned visitors. None had nodules or eye disease and, in contrast to the endemic subjects, microfiladermia was often absent or of low density. All persons studied had antibody responses measurable by ELISA to both soluble Onchocerca
volvulus
antigen and a panel of diagnostic recombinant antigens. Eosinophil and
IgE
levels were significantly higher in the endemic group, as was the capacity of peripheral blood mononuclear cells from this group to produce the T helper cell-like cytokines interleukin-4 and -5. It is likely that the chronicity and intensity of infection in endemic subjects account for the clinical and immunologic differences observed between the 2 groups.
...
PMID:Onchocerciasis in endemic and nonendemic populations: differences in clinical presentation and immunologic findings. 807 40
The existence of immunity to Onchocerca
volvulus
(Ov) infection is suggested by the presence of uninfected persons in hyperendemic areas. A major barrier to the study of immunity has been the correct identification of putatively immune (PI) subjects. To identify a PI group in a hyperendemic area in Ecuador, clinical and epidemiologic information was combined with a polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-based assay identifying Ov DNA in skin snips and a recombinant antigen-based ELISA. Comparison of immune responses revealed that PI subjects had significantly lower levels of Ov-specific IgG, IgG subclasses, and
IgE
than infected (INF) subjects. Female subjects were significantly more likely to be PI than male subjects, and INF female subjects had significantly lower levels of Ov-specific IgG, IgG1, and IgG3 than INF male subjects. Thus, the use of molecular-based techniques has helped to define more precisely the PI state in onchocerciasis.
...
PMID:Immunity to onchocerciasis: identification of a putatively immune population in a hyperendemic area of Ecuador. 793 Jul 13
The serum antibody response (total, and isotypes IgG1, IgG4, IgM, IgA and
IgE
) to Guinea worm infection was examined in humans from a highly endemic area of northern Ghana by ELISA and SDS-PAGE/Western blot techniques using an adult D. medinensis antigen. Sera were obtained early and late in the peak transmission period, from persons with patent and postpatent infections, as well as from persons from the same endemic area who claimed never to have had Guinea worm infection. To observe for potential cross-reactions in the tests, sera were also obtained from areas with no transmission of Guinea worm from patients with hookworm, O.
volvulus
and W. bancrofti infections, and from non-infected controls. Sera from persons living in the Guinea worm endemic area reacted extensively with Guinea worm antigen in both tests, and large numbers of bands were produced in the Western blots (up to 35 identified for some sera). For most antibody isotypes, the ELISA absorbance values obtained with sera from the same individuals varied between the two transmission seasons, with the highest titres present towards the end of the peak transmission period. The mean antibody titres for persons in the patent and postpatent infection categories were not significantly different when sera were obtained at the same season of the year. Persons from the endemic area, who claimed never to experience patent infections, also had antibodies to Guinea worm, although at significantly lower mean levels than for the patent and postpatent categories. The highest specificity in the ELISA and the most homogenous Western blots were obtained when detecting for antibodies of the IgG4 isotype.
...
PMID:The antibody response to Dracunculus medinensis in an endemic human population of northern Ghana. 850 17
Isotype/subclass-specific antibody responses to adult Onchocerca
volvulus
extract (OvAg) were assessed by both ELISA and immunoblotting for a group of putatively immune individuals (PIs, n = 29) from a hyperendemic area in Ecuador and for a group of infected individuals (INFs, n = 470) from the same regions. As a group, the PIs have been previously shown to possess lower levels of OvAg specific IgG1, IgG2, IgG3 and IgG4 than INF's but semi-quantitative analysis revealed that the relative proportions of these subclasses differs between the two groups. The IgG of the PI group contained a higher proportion of IgG3 and a lower proportion of IgG4 than the INF group. The frequency distribution of IgG3 responses was similar for the PI and INF groups. The frequency distributions for IgG1, IgG4 and
IgE
were significantly different between the PI and INF groups. A subgroup of the PIs were identified from frequency distributions and multivariate plots of individual isotype responses as having antibody responses (mainly IgG4) possibly indicative of cryptic infection. High
IgE
responses were exclusive to INF individuals, and a rare response type of high IgG3 with negligible levels of other isotypes/subclasses was seen only in the PI group. However, the majority of the PIs had negligible responses for all antibody classes. Immunoblots demonstrated no obvious differences in qualitative recognition between the PIs and INFs.
...
PMID:Isotype-specific characterization of antibody responses to Onchocerca volvulus in putatively immune individuals. 855 10
To characterize the patterns of immunoglobulin G (IgG) subclass and
IgE
reactivity during the early stages of onchocerciasis, sera were collected from 224 children (age groups, 2 to 5, 6 to 10, and 11 to 15 years) residing in a region of Sierra Leone where Onchocerca
volvulus
is endemic, and these samples were tested by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for their reactivity to adult antigens (OvAg) and against four recombinant proteins (OV11, OV27, OV29, and OV16). Over 88% of the samples contained detectable levels of anti-OvAg IgG. In samples from microfilaria (MF)-positive children, IgG4 responses were significantly elevated and constituted on average 39, 35 and 28% of the total IgG responses for the age groups of 2 to 5, 6 to 10, and 11 to 15 years, respectively. For MF-negative individuals, the mean contributions of IgG4 to the total IgG response were 11% (2 to 5 years), 27% (6 to 10 years), and 56% (11 to 15 years). OvAg-specific
IgE
was detectable in the sera from both MF-negative and MF-positive individuals. To increase the specificity of the response, recombinant antigens OV11, OV27, and OV29 were tested individually or as a cocktail. Nearly 50% of the MF-negative children and 85% of the MF-positive children had detectable levels of IgG against at least one of the recombinant antigens. Only a small portion of the IgG against the recombinant peptides was IgG4. The prevalence of IgG against OV16 in samples from MF-negative children was 51%, and that for MF-positive children was 75%. The general profile of the humoral immune responses mounted by both MF-positive and a large percentage of the MF-negative children during the initial phases of infection with O.
volvulus
is similar to the profile reported for adults harboring chronic O.
volvulus
infections. These results suggest that very quickly after infection, the interactions between parasite and host result in an immunological environment that may contribute to the maintenance of a long-term, chronic infection.
...
PMID:Immunoglobulin G subclass responses of children during infection with Onchocerca volvulus. 877 May 12
Afro-Ecuadorian individuals from an area where Onchocerca
volvulus
is hyperendemic have been monitored for infection over the past 16 years. To determine whether in utero exposure to O.
volvulus
biases a child's subsequent immune responses, children (9 to 16 years old) for whom the mother's infection status was known were chosen for study. Children of infected mothers (n = 19) had significantly higher levels of skin microfilariae than children of uninfected mothers (n = 13; P = 0.021). While the serum levels of O.
volvulus
-specific immunoglobulin G (IgG), IgG subclasses, and
IgE
showed no significant differences between the two groups of children, peripheral blood mononuclear cells of children of infected mothers produced higher levels of Th2-type cytokines to several parasite antigens and lower levels of Th1-type cytokines to nonparasite antigens than those of children of uninfected mothers. Thus, in utero exposure to O.
volvulus
has a long-term effect on the child's subsequent cellular immune response that may render the child more susceptible to O.
volvulus
infection postnatally.
...
PMID:In utero exposure to Onchocerca volvulus: relationship to subsequent infection intensity and cellular immune responsiveness. 894 47
This study examined the development and persistence of immunity in humans presenting defined states of Onchocerca volvulus infection, i.e. in exposed endemic control individuals without microfilaridermia and clinical disease, in patients with patent or post-patent onchocerciasis, and in patients concurrently infected with Mansonella perstans. Onchocerca
volvulus
antigen (OvAg)-specific cellular reactivity was significantly diminished in microfilariae (mf)-positive patients, while the highest reactivity was measured in exposed but mf-negative endemic controls, those being free of any clinical signs of onchocercal disease. In patients who became post-patent, responses to OvAg were significantly augmented, but did not approach entirely the magnitude observed in endemic controls. In onchocerciasis patients with concurrent mansonelliasis, cellular unresponsiveness to OvAg persisted, even when mf of O.
volvulus
were eliminated permanently by repeated ivermectin therapy. Cells from mf-positive onchocerciasis patients produced significantly less interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) (P < 0.01) and interleukin-5 (IL-5) (P < 0.05) in response to OvAg than those taken from endemic controls or post-patent individuals in whom IFN-gamma and IL-5 production was similarly high. In contrast, both OvAg-driven as well as spontaneous IL-10 secretion was higher in mf-positive patients than in endemic controls or post-patent cases. In all individuals examined, serological recognition of OvAg by immunoglobulins was dominated by IgG4; in mf-positive patients OvAg of 205,000-12,000 molecular weight (MW) were strongly bound. In post-patent individuals, and similarly in endemic controls. OvAg recognition by IgG4 varied from intense (with numerous antigens being recognized) to weak or absent antigen binding. Significantly elevated OvAg-specific IgG isotypes were measured in mf-positive onchocerciasis patients in comparison with endemic controls or post-patent individuals (with the exception of IgG3). IgG1, IgG2 and
IgE
were higher, but IgG4 was lower in endemic controls compared with post-patent onchocerciasis patients. The ratios of IgG4/IgG1 differed (P < 0.001) between endemic controls and mf-positive or post-patent onchocerciasis patients, with IgG4/IgG1 ratios of R < 3.0 being characteristic for endemic controls and post-patent O.
volvulus
infection. In conclusion, this cross-sectional immunoepidemiological investigation showed that distinct states of O.
volvulus
infection correlate with a particular cellular and humoral immune response. The mf-free condition appeared to be associated with a vigorous parasite-specific cellular reactivity and a particular cytokine production profile, while concurrent M. perstans infection depressed OvAg-specific cellular responsiveness. Antibody responses, in all likelihood, reflected the intensity and state of infection, and not the degree of acquired immunity protective against parasite aggregation.
...
PMID:The diverse expression of immunity in humans at distinct states of Onchocerca volvulus infection. 917 14
Immunization of mice with irradiated Onchocerca
volvulus
infective stage larvae (L3) has been demonstrated to confer protection against challenge infections with these larvae. Additionally, cytokine level measurements and cytokine depletion studies have shown that both IL-4 and IL-5 are important in generating a protective immune response against O.
volvulus
challenge infections, thus suggesting a dependency of protective immunity on IgG1,
IgE
and/or eosinophils. In the present study, we examined the humoral responses of immunized mice to O.
volvulus
L3 antigens. ELISA measurements of total serum antibody levels indicated that
IgE
was the only antibody isotype elevated in mice immunized with O.
volvulus
L3. IgM from immunized mice was the only isotype that recognized surface antigens on intact O.
volvulus
L3. IgG1, IgG3,
IgE
and IgA recognized internal parasite antigens on O.
volvulus
L3 frozen sections. Western blot analysis of L3 proteins showed that in serum from mice immunized with O.
volvulus
L3 IgG1, IgG2a/2b, IgA, and
IgE
, as well as IgM, recognized unique L3 proteins. Antibodies in serum from L3 immunized mice were able to detect O.
volvulus
adult antigens in a pattern similar to the recognition found in O.
volvulus
L3. Some L3 antigens were shared by adults, while other antigens were L3 specific. The ELISA, immunohistochemistry and Western blot findings thus demonstrate a complex pattern of antigen recognition of parasite antigens by antibodies found in mice immune to the L3 of O.
volvulus
.
...
PMID:Structural and molecular specificity of antibody responses in mice immune to third stage larvae of Onchocerca volvulus. 922 62
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