Abstract

Injection of CBA mice with Brucella abortus strain 19 leads to chronic infection during which both cell-mediated immunity (delayed hypersensitivity and macrophage activation) and antibody production occur. Protection was efficiently transferred to naive mice using spleen cells from mice infected 5 or 12 weeks earlier. Selective lysis in vitro of these cells by antibody to cell surface antigens showed that Thy-1 + Ly-1 +2 + T lymphocytes were required for transfer. Treatment with anti-Ia serum neither suppressed nor enhanced adoptive transfer. Thus Ia + B lymphocytes were not required, and Ia + suppressor T cells were not active in the response. Three injections per week of anti-Ly-1 monoclonal antibody beginning 5 days before infection led to a 10-fold increase in bacterial numbers 25 days after infection when acquired immunity was well established in untreated mice. The delayed hypersensitivity response was unaffected. In addition cells from these in vivo treated mice were unable to transfer resistance. Beginning the treatment on the day of infection abolished the IgG antibody response without affecting bacterial numbers. The studies emphasize the unique role of Ly-1 +2 + T cells in immunity to Brucella and indicate the usefulness of these techniques in dissecting out those components of the immune response which contribute to recovery from infection.

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