Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0271276 (Hudson)
1,066 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

T. brucei infection in mice causes generalized immunosuppression with multiple changes in the cells of the lymphoid tissue. Loss of B cell responsiveness to antigens and mitogens, and the induction of suppressive T-cells and macrophages, have been previously reported (Hudson, Byner, Freeman & Terry, 1976; Corsini, Clayton, Askonas & Ogilvie, 1977; Jayawardena & Waksman, 1977). In this study, purified B- or T-cell populations from infected mice have been tested functionally in vitro or in vivo by transfer into syngeneic irradiated hosts to separate the cells from trypanosomes or their products. B-memory cells for thymus dependent (DNP-KLH) and thymus independent (DNP-Ficoll) antigens are depleted or lose their potential to respond to the antigen during T. brucei infection. Similarly, purified T-helper cells, and T-cells reactive to allogeneic target cells in mixed lymphocyte reactions are functionally defective. By 16 days of infection all these responses are less than 10% of the normal level. The loss of B-cell function follows the peak parasitaemia and is accompanied by increases in the serum levels of both IgM and IgG. Enhanced Ig production and decline in B-cell potential also occur in T-deprived mice and in CBA/N mice which lack a subset of T-independent B-cells. Cells affecting delayed hypersensitivity reactions retain their activity throughout trypanosome infection and so far provide the only exception to the general decline in immune potential.
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PMID:Functional depletion of T- and B-memory cells and other lymphoid cell subpopulations-during trypanosomiasis. 15 50