Abstract

Infection of the mammalian host by schistosome larvae occurs via the skin, although nothing is known about the development of immune responses to multiple exposures of schistosome larvae, and/or their excretory/secretory (E/S) products. Here, we show that multiple (4x) exposures, prior to the onset of egg laying by adult worms, modulate the skin immune response and induce CD4+ cell hypo-responsiveness in the draining lymph node, and even modulate the formation of hepatic egg-induced granulomas. Compared to mice exposed to a single infection (1x), dermal cells from multiply infected mice (4x), were less able to support lymph node cell proliferation. Analysis of dermal cells showed that the most abundant in 4x mice were eosinophils (F4/80+MHC-II−), but they did not impact the ability of antigen presenting cells (APC) to support lymphocyte proliferation to parasite antigen in vitro. However, two other cell populations from the dermal site of infection appear to have a critical role. The first comprises arginase-1+, Ym-1+ alternatively activated macrophage-like cells, and the second are functionally compromised MHC-IIhi cells. Through the administration of exogenous IL-12 to multiply infected mice, we show that these suppressive myeloid cell phenotypes form as a consequence of events in the skin, most notably an enrichment of IL-4 and IL-13, likely resulting from an influx of RELMα-expressing eosinophils. We further illustrate that the development of these suppressive dermal cells is dependent upon IL-4Rα signalling. The development of immune hypo-responsiveness to schistosome larvae and their effect on the subsequent response to the immunopathogenic egg is important in appreciating how immune responses to helminth infections are modulated by repeated exposure to the infective early stages of development.

Highlights

  • Schistosomiasis is an important tropical disease caused by the parasitic helminth Schistosoma and affects 200 million people [1,2] with a further 779 million at risk of infection [3]

  • We show that multiple exposures to schistosome larvae cause lymphocyte hypo-responsiveness, partly mediated by macrophages and dendritic cells from the skin which have a ‘down-regulated’ phenotype and are not able to act as efficient antigen presenting cells (APCs)

  • These regulated APCs are conditioned amongst high levels of the cytokines IL-4 and IL-13 which follow an influx of abundant eosinophils

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Summary

Introduction

Schistosomiasis is an important tropical disease caused by the parasitic helminth Schistosoma and affects 200 million people [1,2] with a further 779 million at risk of infection [3]. Infection of the host proceeds via the rapid penetration of exposed areas of skin by invasive aquatic cercariae, and people living in endemic areas are likely to repeatedly come into contact with infective cercariae. It is not known whether repeated exposure to cercariae affects the development of immune responses in the skin, or responses to later stages of the parasite such as the egg which is the primary agent of Th2 biased immunopathology [2,4,5]. Infection elicits an initial neutrophil influx into the skin [8], followed by MHC-II+

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