Abstract

Immune regulation during syphilitic infection is extremely complex. This paper presents findings on the early events of T-cell activation following testicular infection in rabbits. Treponema pallidum was preincubated for 24 h with nonadherent spleen cells. After being washed to remove the organisms, these spleen cells were either stimulated with concanavalin A (ConA) to induce interleukin-2 (IL-2), or added to adherent cells that were then stimulated with lipopolysaccharide to induce IL-1. Preincubation with the treponemes up-regulated nonadherent cell functions. These sensitized cells increased their IL-2 production and augmented macrophage IL-1 synthesis. In sharp contrast, if this preincubation step was omitted, down-regulation was apparent. When T. pallidum was directly incubated with nonadherent cells in the presence of ConA, reduced levels of IL-2 were detected. Nonadherent cells from infected rabbits secreted soluble suppressive factors after 48 h of in vitro incubation; these factors inhibited ConA-induced IL-2 generation as well as ConA-induced lymphocyte proliferation. At least some of this suppressive activity was attributed to transforming growth factor. In addition, when T lymphocytes were depleted, less suppression was detected. Treponemes also inhibited ConA-induced T-cell proliferation, and monophosphoryl lipid A reversed this inhibitory effect. Since monophosphoryl lipid A neutralizes T-suppressor activity, these findings further suggest a role for T-suppressor activity during syphilitic infection. Finally, T. pallidum directly stimulated IL-2 synthesis when coincubated with phorbol myristate acetate. This agent reverses the prostaglandin E2 blockage of T-helper cell protein kinase C, a necessary second messenger signal for IL-2 synthesis. In summary, T-cell functions are extremely complex and represent a composite of both stimulation and down-regulation, which occur concurrently but to different degrees.

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