Abstract

Repeated injections of viable eggs of Ascaris suum into the peritoneal cavity of BALB/c mice induced marked peritoneal eosinophilia (9.3 X 10(6) cells/mouse, 52.8%) without infection. Extracted antigen (Asc) and eggs that had been killed also were able to induce marked eosinophilia; however, their levels were significantly lower (p less than 0.001). This experimental system was able to demonstrate how various multiple factors cumulatively affected the degree of peritoneal eosinophilia. These factors included: mechanical stimulation, caused by the repeated peritoneal lavages (4.4 X 10(5) cells/mouse), against a background level of peritoneal eosinophils of 4.5 X 10(4) cells/mouse; T-cell-independent stimulation, observed when the viable eggs were injected repeatedly into athymic nude mice (nu/nu; 1.6 X 10(6) cells/mouse), while on the other hand, neither eggs that had been killed nor Asc displayed any T-cell-independent augmentation of eosinophilia; and, T-cell-dependent augmentation of peritoneal eosinophilia, observed in heterozygous athymic mice (nu/+), in thymocyte-reconstituted nu/nu, and in normal BALB/c mice. Egg culture supernatant could not act on bone marrow cells to support eosinophil colony formation. In conclusion, only viable eggs were considered prime inducers, consisting of T-independent and T-dependent parts exerting cumulative effects.

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