Abstract

When chicks are injected with the immunosuppressant cyclophosphamide (Cy) on days 1 and 2 after hatching and then injected with sporozoites from infected mosquitoes on day 4, the normal susceptibility of only one host cell type to the sequential invasive stages of the preerythrocytic forms of avian malaria ( Plasmodium gallinaceum) is increased. Thus, only endothelial cells lining capillaries showed an increased susceptibility to invasion or development of second generation preerythrocytic parasites. There is some indication that such an increased susceptibility also occurs after X-irradiation of chicks but not after treatment with endotoxin. Neither the infectivity or development of sporozoites within macrophages nor the invasion of erythrocytes by parasites released from the tissues was apparently affected by Cy-treatment of chicks. Neither suppression of natural anti-sporozoite humoral antibody nor the possibility of suppression of acquired immunity to preerythrocytic stages of the parasite was shown to be responsible for the observed increased parasitemia of Cy-treated chicks. The apparent specificity of the immunosuppression of a natural immunity was ascertained by inoculation of a selected preerythrocytic stage into Cy-treated and control birds, and, in addition, by observing the increased tissue parasite levels of spleens and brains of similarly treated birds after sporozoite inoculation when compared to controls.

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