Abstract

Blood and bone marrow eosinophilia was assessed in nonpermissive (guinea pigs) and permissive (rats) hosts following the pulmonary arterial transfers of live or dead young adult worms of Angiostrongylus cantonensis. Guinea pigs showed a marked eosinophilic response to live worms but only a slight response to dead worms. Neither IgE nor haemagglutinating antibodies correlated with the induction of this eosinophilia. In contrast, the rat responded to neither form of the young adult worm. When the guinea pig and the rat were injected with whole worm extract (WWE) of the young adult worms either by an osmotic mini-pump connected to the jugular vein or by intermittent intravenous injections, the former animal showed blood eosinophilia but the latter failed to do so. Guinea pigs also developed blood eosinophilia after continuous exposure to the excretory and secretory products of the young adult worms, administered by the mini-pump. Eosinophil responses to WWE could be induced both in athymic CD-1 (ICR) nude mice and in its heterozygous litter mates, suggesting that T cell-independent mechanism(s) could be involved in the induction of blood eosinophilia in the nonpermissive, mouse host. These data clearly indicate that the eosinophilia-inducing factor(s) and the mechanism of eosinophilia are different in permissive and nonpermissive hosts.

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