Abstract

Chronic and generalized onchocerciasis is associated with suppression of the parasite-specific cellular responsiveness, while exposed individuals without parasitological and clinical evidence of infection (endemic normals) display prominent cellular reactivity to Onchocerca volvulus antigens (OvAg). In order to identify those parasite antigens which may account for this differential cellular responsiveness, total adult worm-derived OvAg were fractionated by means of preparative SDS-PAGE and blot-elution into 22 antigen fractions of continuously decreasing molecular weight. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) from microfilariae (mf)-positive onchocerciasis patients (n = 18) proliferated weakly in response to all OvAg fractions. In contrast, in vitro reactivity of PBMC from endemic normals (n = 9) was depressed in response to OvAg of mol. wt 200-30 kD only, while antigens of mol. wt < 30 kD induced vigorous proliferation in these individuals compared with the microfilaridermic patients (P < 0.05). Highest proliferative reactivity of cells from endemic normals was observed in response to OvAg of mol. wt 15-11 kD. Furthermore, these low mol. wt antigen fractions induced substantial production of IL-2 and interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) in PBMC from endemic normals, but not in those from onchocerciasis patients. Cells from individuals of both groups secreted similar amounts of IL-5 in response to all OvAg fractions, with highest production again being induced by low mol. wt OvAg. In contrast, PBMC from onchocerciasis patients clearly produced more IL-10 than did cells from endemic normals. This augmented IL-10 production by PBMC from mf-positive individuals was not only observed after stimulation with OvAg fractions, but was measured in unstimulated control cultures as well. IFN-gamma-specific mRNA in antigen-stimulated PBMC from endemic normals appeared to be more prominent than in cells from onchocerciasis patients. However, mRNA transcripts of IL-10 and IL-13 were clearly present in patients, but were absent or inconsistently observed in endemic normals. Our results suggest that vigorous Th1-type cellular responsiveness encountered in endemic normals is restricted to low mol. wt antigens of O. volvulus, while such reactivity will not be present in mf-positive individuals. Furthermore, spontaneous production of high levels of IL-10 in onchocerciasis patients is likely to suppress Th1-type immunity, and thus may favour manifestation of chronic onchocerciasis. These traits of cellular immunity may contribute to the differential outcome of O. volvulus infection, the manifestation of clinical disease, and may also regulate the build up of acquired immunity in humans.

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