Abstract

Lammas D.A., Mitchell L.A. and Wakelin D. 1988. Genetic control of eosinophilia in parasitic infections: responses of mouse strains to treatment with cyclophosphamide and parasite antigen. International Journal for Parasitology 18:1077–1085. Strain-dependent variation in the capacity of inbred and congenic mice to mount an eosinophilia in response to inoculation with the antigens of Mesocestoides corti, Trichinella spiralis or with Limulus haemocyanin (LCH), following pretreatment with cyclophosphamide (CY), is described. SWR, NIH, BALB/c, C3H and SJL mice were eosinophil high responder strains whereas C57 BL/10 and CBA mice were eosinophil low responder strains. Congenic strains with the B10 background (B10.S, B10.G and B10.BR) were all low eosinophil responders, although B10.G mice showed a level of response consistently above the other B10 congenic strains. Some of the gene(s) for high responsiveness appeared to be dominant, because F(In1)hybrids between high and low eosinophil response parental strains were intermediate to high responders. The strain-dependent pattern of eosinophil responsiveness to LHC or to M. corti and T. spiralis antigens, following CY pretreatment, was similar to that obtained previously following infection with either M. corti or T. spiralis, suggesting that heterogeneity in capacity to produce eosinophils operates independently of the nature of the eliciting stimulus.

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