Abstract

To investigate immune responses upon re-infection with Lawsonia intracellularis, local and peripheral humoral and cell-mediated immune responses to primary and challenge inoculations were studied in 22 pigs. Pigs were orally inoculated with virulent L. intracellularis at the age of 5-6 weeks, treated with antibiotics and challenged with a re-inoculation (RE) at the age of 12 weeks. Treatment control (TC) pigs received only the primary inoculation and challenge control (CC) pigs received only the secondary inoculation at 12 weeks of age. Following this regimen, all RE pigs were protected against the re-infection as defined by reduced colonisation and pathology of intestinal mucosa, absence of bacterial shedding and without increase in serum acute phase protein response. In the protected RE pigs, serum IgG responses were variable with both high and low responders. Serum IgA responses were not boosted by the re-inoculation, since identical intestinal IgA responses developed in response to the inoculation in both the susceptible CC pigs and the protected RE pigs. A memory recall cell-mediated immune response developed in RE pigs which was significantly stronger compared to the primary response in age-matched CC pigs as assessed by whole blood IFN-γ assay and by calculation of IFN-γ integrated median fluorescence intensity (iMFI) after flow cytometry. The major IFN-γ producing cells were identified as CD8+ and CD4+CD8+ double positive lymphocytes. The results indicate that cell-mediated immune responses are likely mediators of protective immunity against L. intracellularis, with CD8+ effector cells and CD4+CD8+ double positive memory T cells as main contributors to the antigen-specific IFN-γ production.

Highlights

  • Lawsonia intracellularis is an obligate intracellular bacterium residing in intestinal epithelial cells and identified as the aetiological agent of porcine proliferative enteropathy [1,2,3]

  • In the Treatment control (TC) group the IgG responses to the primary inoculation were low, if the pigs were at all positive, while all naive challenge control (CC) pigs responded to the challenge with a marked IgG response in serum

  • The immune response to a subclinical primary L. intracellularis infection is highly variable between pigs infected at different ages

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Lawsonia intracellularis is an obligate intracellular bacterium residing in intestinal epithelial cells and identified as the aetiological agent of porcine proliferative enteropathy [1,2,3]. Local inflammatory responses to L. intracellularis infection are minimal, cell-mediated immune responses (CMI) with infiltration of CD8+ cells and macrophages have been observed in intestinal sections from pigs affected with proliferative enteropathy [13]. MacIntyre et al [15] demonstrated an association between the presence of L. intracellularis and reduced numbers of T and B cells in intestinal tissue sections, suggesting an immunosuppressive mechanism of L. intracellularis infection. We reported how potentiating the whole-blood IFN-g assay with exogenous recombinant IL-18 enhanced the antigen-specific production of IFN-g sufficiently to facilitate a more detailed measurement of CMI development in L. intracellularis infected pigs [18]

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call