|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Publication : A role for B cells in resistance to Cryptococcus neoformans in mice.

First Author  Aguirre KM Year  1997
Journal  Infect Immun Volume  65
Issue  2 Pages  525-30
PubMed ID  9009308 Mgi Jnum  J:37764
Mgi Id  MGI:85151 Doi  10.1128/iai.65.2.525-530.1997
Citation  Aguirre KM, et al. (1997) A role for B cells in resistance to Cryptococcus neoformans in mice. Infect Immun 65(2):525-30
abstractText  The role of B cells in immunity to Cryptococcus neoformans was investigated. Genetically targeted, B-cell-deficient mice (mu Mt) examined at various times after intravenous infection with C. neoformans 184 had lung and brain yeast burdens that were equivalent to tissue burdens in control B-cell-sufficient mice. Both B-cell-deficient and B-cell-sufficient control mice were effectively vaccinated by a sublethal intratracheal instillation of strain 184 yeast against a systemic infection with the C. neoformans strain carrying ura5; vaccinated control and vaccinated B-cell-deficient mice had equivalent brain and lung burdens of the ura5 strain 10 days after intravenous rechallenge. Additionally, B-cell-deficient and B-cell-sufficient vaccinated mice survived an intravenous rechallenge with a dose of yeast cells which is normally lethal for unimmunized mice. In further studies of the role of B cells in murine cryptococcosis, SCID mice were reconstituted with lymphocytes from B-cell-deficient and B-cell-sufficient mice. SCID mice reconstituted with lymphocytes from vaccinated B-cell-deficient animals failed to express effective adoptive immunity to C. neoformans brain infection. In contrast, SCID mice reconstituted with lymphocytes from vaccinated B-cell-sufficient mice had 10-fold fewer yeast cells in their brains than did uninfused SCID controls. However, SCID mice given lymphocytes from B-cell-deficient immune donors had fewer yeast cells in their lungs than did uninfused controls. Fewer CD4+ lymphocytes were recovered at 7 and 11 days after infection from the peripheral blood and spleens of SCID mice reconstituted with lymphocyte suspensions from B-cell-deficient animals than from the peripheral blood and spleens of SCID mice reconstituted with suspensions from B-cell-sufficient control donors. These data suggest that B cells can play an important role in host defense against Cryptococcus in the brain under conditions in which T-cell-mediated immunity is impaired.
Quick Links:
 
Quick Links:
 

Expression

Publication --> Expression annotations

 

Other

2 Authors

0 Bio Entities

0 Expression