Abstract

Activated macrophages (M phi) appear responsible for at least part of the concomitant resistance in mice infected with Schistosoma mansoni. We found that as murine S. mansoni progressed from acute (8 to 12 wk of infection) to chronic (16 to 24 wk) stages, acquired resistance decreased (57% resistance to challenge with cercariae at 8 wk vs 28% by 24 wk, p less than 0.05), as did macrophage activation (21% +/- 2 killing of schistosomula by 8 wk M phi vs 8% +/- 2 for 24 wk M phi, p less than 0.01). T cells from the spleens of 8 wk-infected mice were capable of activating M phi from naive animals when stimulated with worm antigens (24% +/- 2 killing vs 8% +/- 2 induced by normal T cells, p less than 0.01); T cells obtained from 24 wk-infected mice did not activate M phi (13% +/- 2 killing). Furthermore, T cells from 24 wk-infected animals suppressed activation of M phi by 8 wk T cells. The addition of 10(5) 24 wk T cells to 3 X 10(5) antigen-stimulated 8 wk T cells reduced subsequent M phi killing from 27% +/- 4 to 13% +/- 2 (p less than 0.05). Week 24 T cells (3 X 10(5] reduced this additionally to 9% +/- 1 (p less than 0.01), a value no greater than that of unstimulated M phi. The subpopulation of T cells responsible for suppression of M phi activation was Lyt-2+1- nonadherent T cells. Cyclophosphamide treatment of chronically infected mice resulted in enhanced resistance (41%), M phi activation (18% +/- 1 killing), and T cell activation of naive M phi (10% +/- 1 killing). Thus, during chronic S. mansoni infection, resistance to reinfection wanes in parallel to and perhaps because of development of suppressor T cells that interfere with T-dependent M phi activation.

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