First Author | Brummer E | Year | 1994 |
Journal | Cell Immunol | Volume | 157 |
Issue | 1 | Pages | 1-10 |
PubMed ID | 8039240 | Mgi Jnum | J:19827 |
Mgi Id | MGI:67953 | Doi | 10.1006/cimm.1994.1200 |
Citation | Brummer E, et al. (1994) Anticryptococcal activity of macrophages: role of mouse strain, C5, contact, phagocytosis, and L-arginine. Cell Immunol 157(1):1-10 |
abstractText | The antifungal activity of nonactivated resident murine peritoneal macrophages for Cryptococcus neoformans was studied. Macrophages from five of six mouse strains tested had significant (40 to 80%) fungistatic activity, depending on the inoculum size, in a 24-hr coculture system. Macrophages from two outbred (SW and ICR) and three inbred (BALB/c, C57Bl/6, and DBA/2J) strains were fungistatic. Only macrophages from outbred CD-1 mice lacked fungistatic activity. Heat-inactivated and C5-deficient sera did not support phagocytosis or fungistasis by resident BALB/c or DBA/2 macrophages. Fungistasis correlated with contact, complement, and phagocytosis. Macrophages were studied in a Lab-Tek chamber slide system where noningested cells were washed away. Fungistasis in this system was similar to that found with a microtest plate coculture method where a smaller inoculum was cultured continuously with macrophages. After ingestion of yeast cells, CD-1 macrophages could be activated for fungistasis (70%) with interferon-gamma plus lipopolysaccharide. Activated BALB/c macrophages had increased fungistasis but were not fungicidal. NG-Monomethyl-L-arginine (200 microM), which inhibited the fungistatic activity of activated CD-1 macrophages, did not inhibit inherent fungistatic activity of BALB/c macrophages. The fungistatic mechanism of BALB/c macrophages resembled that reported for resident human macrophages. |