Abstract

The lymphocyte response to F. hepatica during a primary infection in cattle was analysed to define the role of T cell subsets in the immune response. Blood lymphocytes were isolated from eight cattle infected with F. hepatica via trickle infection over a ten-day period and from two non-infected controls. CD4+, CD8+ and gamma delta + T cells were depleted from whole lymphocyte populations by magnetic bead depletion. Lymphocytes from infected animals demonstrated a transient, but marked elevation in responsiveness to F. hepatica antigen between weeks 3 and 8 post-infection. Responses were attenuated by depletion of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells during this period. Depletion of gamma delta + T cells attenuated antigen responses at one time point only, and at an earlier stage post-infection than when alpha beta + T cells were depleted. Responses to antigen correlated positively with both hepatic fluke burden and with the degree of hepatic damage. This suggests that the cellular immune response was not protective. Antigen responses in gamma delta + T cell-depleted populations were also associated with post-mortem fluke burden and with hepatic damage. This suggests that gamma delta + T cells are involved in down regulating alpha beta + lymphocytes which may have a role in a non-protective or immunopathological immune responses.

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