Abstract
The importance of CD8+ T cells in immunity against Toxoplasma gondii is now well recognized. The mechanism by which these CD8+ T cells are able to confer this immunity is not yet understood. To examine the Ag specificity of this response, immune splenocytes from mice immunized with p30, a major surface parasite Ag, were evaluated for their ability to lyse peritoneal macrophages infected with three different strains of T. gondii. Macrophages infected with either the RH or P wild-type strain tachyzoites were lysed at varying E:T ratios by nylon wool nonadherent immune splenocytes whereas macrophages infected with a p30-deficient mutant (B mutant) of the P strain were not. The gene encoding p30 for the wild type and B mutant were amplified by the polymerase chain reaction. This revealed a nonsense mutation in the B mutant such that its primary translation product is predicted to be about two-thirds the size of the wild-type p30 molecule. mAb depletion studies indicate that the cytotoxic effect of the immune splenocytes is mediated by the CD8+ T cell population. Peritoneal macrophages infected with the three different strains (RH, P wild type, B mutant) from mice genetically restricted were not lysed by the immune CD8+ effector cell population. A cloned line (C3) of p30 Ag-specific CD8+ T cells exhibited significant cytotoxicity against syngeneic peritoneal macrophages infected with either the RH or P strain tachyzoites. There was no macrophage lysis observed by these CD8+ effector cells of either syngeneic macrophages infected with the B mutant or nonsyngeneic macrophages infected with the three different tachyzoite strains.
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