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Query: UMLS:C0851341 (
infestation
)
10,121
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The effect of severe T-cell depletion on mucosal mast cells of the small intestine and on connective tissue mast cells has been studied in adult thymectomized, irradiated, bone marrow reconstituted (B) rats. Under normal conditions, intestinal mucosal mast cell numbers do not differ significantly between B rats, normal age matched rats and non-thymectomized irradiated controls. Connective tissue mast cells are significantly fewer in the tongues of B rats than in normal rats, but the difference is atributable to an effect of irradiation.
Infestation
with Nippostrongylus brasiliensis produced approximately equal increases in mucosal mast cells in non-thymectomized irradiation controls and in normal rats. In B rats there was no increase in mucosal mast cells following
infestation
. B rats failed to expel the parasites normally. Failure of mast cell proliferation was not due to the effects of the persisting worm burden. Antihelminthic treatment at the time of worm expulsion by normal rats did not reveal a hitherto masked mast cell response in B rats. Nippostrongylus
infestation
did not reveal evidence of
thymus
-dependency of connective tissue mast cells. As in athymic nude mice, mucosal mast cells in the rat have been shown to be T-cell dependent during the proliferation that follows
infestation
with an intestinal nematode parasite.
...
PMID:Mast cells in severely T-cell depleted rats and the response to infestation with Nippostrongylus brasiliensis. 31 98
We have generated and examined transgenic mice carrying a rearranged immunoglobulin transgene coding for the heavy chain of an IgE antibody. These mice produce the secreted form of the recombinant epsilon heavy chain. Serum IgE levels were increased at least 100-fold over control values. Transgenic epsilon mRNA was detected in spleen and
thymus
, not in liver and heart. Transgenic epsilon production in vitro was slightly up-regulated by T cells, but not affected by interleukin 4 in vitro or Nippostrongylus
infestation
in vivo. The B cell and T cell compartments and antigen-specific IgE, IgG1 and IgM responses as well as the increase in endogenous IgE after Nippostrongylus
infestation
in transgenic mice were normal. These data indicate that the presence of high levels of transgenic IgE did not induce class-specific suppressive mechanisms. Transgenic IgE bound to Fc epsilon receptor type I and Fc epsilon receptor type II and mediated histamine release from mast cells in vitro and an allergic skin reaction in vivo. It inhibited an ovalbumin-specific skin reaction in ovalbumin-immunized transgenic mice only during the initial phases of the immune response. This result has a bearing on the feasibility of immune therapy of allergic diseases with substances that block binding of IgE to its receptors.
...
PMID:Expression and biological effects of high levels of serum IgE in epsilon heavy chain transgenic mice. 190 Dec 66
Infestation
of the gastrointestinal tract by parasitic nematodes is invariably associated with mucosal mastocytosis, which is a
thymus
-dependent phenomenon in parasitized rats, and is adoptively transferable with a T cell-enriched population of thoracic duct lymphocytes. When derived by in vitro culture, mucosal mast cells (MMC) arise from a bone marrow precursor after stimulation by T cell-derived factors. In rats infected with the nematode Trichinella spiralis, mucosal mastocytosis is temporally associated with the immune expulsion of the adult worms whereas in the case of Nippostrongylus brasiliensis, mastocytosis is frequently observed to occur after worm expulsion has been completed. Consequently, there has been doubt as to whether MMC are active and serve a functional role in the expulsion of rat intestinal nematodes. MMC contain and secrete a neutral proteinase, rat mast cell protease II (RMCP II); detection and assay of secreted RMCP II therefore provides a direct measurement of MMC activity. Here we describe the release of this enzyme into the blood of rats infected with N. brasiliensis or T. spiralis. Our results show that the systemic secretion of RMCP II coincides with the immune expulsion of these nematodes, demonstrating clearly for the first time that rat MMC are functionally active during the immune elimination of primary nematode infections.
...
PMID:Mucosal mast cells are functionally active during spontaneous expulsion of intestinal nematode infections in rat. 650 56
Sarcoptes scabiei var. canis was successfully transferred from the dog to New Zealand White Rabbits, Oryctologus cuniculus. Natural and experimental transfers were accomplished between rabbits. The dog strain transferred to rabbits showed no morphologic changes and was readily transferred back to dogs. Experimental transfer of var. canis to guinea pigs and pigs resulted in only temporary
infestation
. Attempts to infest haired and hairless mice,
thymus
-deficient (nude) mice, and rats were unsuccessful. The unsuccessful or transient nature of cross-infestations between some host species and complete cross-
infestation
in others leads to the conclusion that all S. scabiei varieties are not host-specific but that they do possess some degree of host preference and that physiologic differences between varieties exist.
...
PMID:Cross infestivity of Sarcoptes scabiei. 673 42
A patient with typical larva migrans lesions associated with a highly pruritic papular folliculitis is presented. The time course of the evolution and the pathological picture - with local accumulation of lymphocytes, mast cells and eosinophils - mirror a typical
thymus
-dependent reaction to parasitic
infestation
. The papular and serpiginous lesions did not respond to the same type of therapy.
...
PMID:Larva migrans with eosinophilic papular folliculitis. 706 78
The clinical signs of a Sarcoptes scabiei (De Geer) (Acari: Sarcoptidae)
infestation
are initially delayed, which suggests that the mites can depress the immune/inflammatory response. The purpose of this study was to investigate the modulatory properties of scabies mites in vivo at the gene expression level in a secondary lymphoid organ that is involved in initiating an immune response to the parasite. We found that substances from scabies mites influenced the expression of mRNA for molecules that participate in the sequestering of lymphocytes in the periarteriolar lymphoid sheath, primary follicle, and marginal zone of the spleen. Mice exposed to live scabies mites exhibited decreased mRNA expression for the adhesion molecules intercellular adhesion molecule (ICAM)-1, ICAM-2 and L-selectin; the cytokines tumor necrosis factor (TNF)alpha and CCL5; and the receptors for several other cytokines including TNF and interferon gamma. In addition, exposure to live mites or vaccination with a scabies extract resulted in reduced expression of mRNA for B7-2, CD40, CD4, CD8, and CD45, thereby potentially reducing the physical interactions between B cells and T-helper (Th)2 helper cells, between Th1 and Tc cells, and between T-helper cells and antigen-presenting cells, thus depressing their function in response to
thymus
-dependent antigen. Live scabies mites also depressed expression of toll-like receptors 2, 4, and 6. In conclusion, our results indicate that live mites produce substances that can down-regulate expression of adhesion molecules, cytokines, chemokines, chemokine receptors, and lymphocyte surface molecules involved in leukocyte sequestering and the interaction of B and T cells during activation of an immune response in the spleen.
...
PMID:In vivo evidence that Sarcoptes scabiei (Acari: Sarcoptidae) is the source of molecules that modulate splenic gene expression. 1804 6
Using the methods of light microscopy, eosinophil topography, quantitative and qualitative changes (degranulation level of and a cationic protein content) were studied in the
thymus
and bursa of 36 herring gull nestlings Larus argentatus mongolicus (Suskin, 1925) 2 weeks after experimental
infestation
with gull-tapeworm Diphyllobothrium dendriticum (Nitsch, 1824). Eosinophils in the
thymus
were located in trabecules, mainly close to the blood vessels, thymic (Hassall's) corpuscles and also directly inside them, while in the bursa they were found within the internodular space. As compared with the control bird counts, relative eosinophil count in the birds with an average invasion intensity was increased 3.8 times in the
thymus
and 2.5 times in the bursa. In birds with high invasion intensity, these counts were increased 4 times in the
thymus
and 1.2 times in the bursa.
...
PMID:[The reaction of the bursa and thymus eosinophils in the herring gull after the experimental infection with gull-tapeworm]. 2150 Apr 30
In the austral summer of 2011, in the rural area of Villarrica county, southern Chile (39 degrees 16'S, 72 degrees 19'W), seven black-faced ibis juveniles (approximately 4 mo old) were observed in the field with weakness; they were unable to follow the group and struggling to take flight. Three of these birds were euthanatized, and complete necropsies were performed. Gross examination showed severe
infestation
with Colpocephalum trispinum and Ardeicola melanopis lice, moderate emaciation, pale musculature, bursal atrophy, and severe hemorrhagic enteritis due to a heavy proventricular and intestinal infection with Porrocaecum heteropterum nematodes. Fungal pneumonia and severe lymphoid depletion on
thymus
, spleen, and bursa were diagnosed by microscopic examination. Bursal lesions included apoptosis and necrosis of lymphoid cells, and several cystic follicles. The presence of severe lymphoid depletion associated with fungal pneumonia and severe external and internal parasite infections suggest the presence of an immunosuppressive syndrome in these birds that caused the death of several black-faced ibis juveniles in southern Chile during the summer of 2011.
...
PMID:Immunosuppressive syndrome in juvenile black-faced ibises (Theristicus melanopis melanopis) in southern Chile. 2305 Apr 84