Abstract

We found that in mice which had been immunized intraperitoneally with 2 x 10(8) heat-killed Candida albicans cells there was a striking temporal relationship between resistance to systemic challenge with 10(6) living C. albicans cells and a number of measurable cellular parameters of the host response. These included the emergence of delayed-type hypersensitivity and the development of granulocytosis. Since it had been shown in previous work that granulocytosis was associated with an increase in resistance when nonspecific immunostimulation was used, we performed experiments to induce delayed-type hypersensitivity without any measurable modification of the granulocyte population. Adoptive transfer of delayed-type hypersensitivity with spleen cells from immune and resistant donor mice did not produce any increase in resistance in normal recipients. When separate groups of mice were immunized intraperitoneally or subcutaneously with varying doses of heat-killed C. albicans, we found that doses of less than 10(8) cells did induce significant delayed-type hypersensitivity without any increase in granulocytosis. In such mice, as well as in animals pretreated with immunomodulators before immunization with heat-killed C. albicans, the presence of cell-mediated immunity, as measured by the delayed-type hypersensitivity test, was not associated with an increase in resistance against systemic candidiasis. On the contrary, the results suggested that cell-mediated immunity was associated with an increase in the susceptibility of these mice. The same effect on candidiasis susceptibility was observed when animals were immunized with heat-killed filamentous C. albicans.

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