Abstract

Peritoneal macrophages from Schistosoma mansoni-infected mice are activated both for nonspecific tumor cytotoxicity and for killing of skin-stage schistosomula in vitro. In the current study, mechanisms for induction of macrophage tumoricidal and schistosomulacidal activity have been compared. Examination of macrophages activated in vivo by BCG infection or C. parvum treatment, or in vitro by exposure to lymphokine prepared from antigen-stimulated BCG-immune spleen cells, showed that these effector functions were closely linked. Indeed, fractionation of lymphokine-rich supernatant fluids by Sephadex G-100 gel filtraction showed that activities responsible for induction of schistomula killing by inflammatory macrophages and for induction of tumoricidal activity cochromatographed as a single peak in the 50,000 MW region. Thus, development of macrophage-mediated cytotoxicity against these two extracellular (tumor cell or helminth) targets was coincident in several cell populations activated in vivo or in vitro. However, activation for tumoricidal and schistosomulacidal capacity appeared to be quantitatively dissociated in macrophages from mice with chronic schistosomiasis; those cells demonstrated low, yet significant, levels of larval killing ( 1 3 to 1 5 those of BCG or lymphokine-activated cells) but maximal levels of tumor cell cytotoxicity. Furthermore, cytotoxicity by peritoneal cells from S. mansoni-infected mice was not increased in vitro by exposure to lymphokine. Identification of this functional alteration in S. mansoni-activated cells may help to clarify the role of macrophages in the partial immunity against challenge infection which is demonstrated by mice with chronic primary S. mansoni infection.

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