Abstract

Serum-mediated regulation of T-cell responses specific for soluble egg antigen (SEA) of Schistosoma japonicum was tested in human hosts. When we added autologous serum to SEA-specific human T-cell lines (CD3+, 4+, 8-), we observed suppression of T-cell proliferation, and this suppressive activity was detected in the immunoglobulin-G2 (IgG2) subclass. Suppression was dose-dependent and antigen-specific. T-cell proliferation induced by only one SEA fraction of greater than 18 kDa was modulated in the presence of 100 micrograms/ml autologous as well as allogeneic infected IgG2. This SEA fraction-driven proliferation was also regulated by suppressor T-cells through distinct suppressive mechanisms. Our results suggest that T-cell responses to a particular component(s) of SEA are strictly regulated through both cellular and humoral mechanisms in human chronic S. japonicum infection.

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