Abstract

The kinetics of primary and secondary infections with Taenia crassiceps larvae and the effects of immune serum on T. crassiceps larvae were studied in BALB/c and BDF1 mice. In both strains of mice a substantial degree of resistance to reinfection comparable to that previously reported in C3H mice can be induced by subcutaneous injection of three larvae 3 weeks prior to intraperitoneal challenge infection. Both early immune damage in the absence of adherent host cells and encapsulation by host cells are involved in rejection of larvae by BALB/c and BDF1 mice, but in both of these strains early immune damage is less pronounced and the cellular encapsulation response considerably more prominent than in the C3H mice studied previously. This difference is also reflected in the effect of immune serum on T. crassiceps metacestodes in vitro: immune serum from BALB/c and BDF1 mice is less effective than immune serum taken from C3H mice at comparable times after challenge infection in mediating damage to T. crassiceps larvae in vitro in the absence of host cells. These results suggest that genetically determined differences in immune capability can alter the state of equilibrium existing among different immune effector mechanisms without producing measurable effects upon overall host resistance to reinfection.

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