Whole blood preparations from patients with either the indeterminate (asymptomatic) or cardiac clinical forms of chronic Trypanosoma cruzi infection were analyzed by flow cytometry using double-labeling to identify subsets of circulating lymphocytes. Several significant differences were demonstrated between the blood lymphocyte profiles of chagasic patients and non-chagasic controls. Clear increase in the percentages and actual numbers of double-positive cells of the phenotype CD3+/HLA-DR+, as well as decrease in the percentage of CD45RA+/CD4+ and CD45RA+/CD8+ T cells, indicate greater numbers of activated T cells circulating in the blood of infected patients. Consistent parallel increases were seen also in the B lymphocyte subset which stained double-positive for CD19/CD5. There were no significant differences in the circulation of these chronic chagasic patients in the CD4:CD8 ratios. Also, no substantive phenotypic differences were observed in the lymphocyte populations between the two ends of the clinical spectrum (indeterminate versus cardiac) in chronic human Chagas' disease. These observations demonstrate that increased levels of activated T cells and CD5+ B cells are present in the circulation of people with chronic Chagas' disease. These are cell phenotypes that have been associated in other conditions with autoimmune, polyclonal, and hyperimmune responses. The specificities of these activated cells and the roles they may play in resistance or pathogenesis during chronic Chagas' disease need now to be determined.
Exposure to maternal idiotypes (Ids) or antigens might predispose a child to develop an immunoregulated, asymptomatic clinical presentation of schistosomiasis. We have used an experimental murine system to address the role of Ids in this immunoregulation. Sera from mice with 8-wk Schistosoma mansoni infection, chronic (20-wk infection) moderate splenomegaly syndrome (MSS), or chronic hypersplenomegaly syndrome (HSS) were passed over an S. mansoni soluble egg antigen (SEA) immunoaffinity column to prepare Ids (8WkId, MSS Id, HSS Id). Newborn mice were injected with 8WkId, MSS Id, HSS Id, or normal mouse immunoglobulin (NoMoIgG) and infected with S. mansoni 8 wk later. Mice exposed to 8WkId or MSS Id as newborns had prolonged survival and decreased morbidity compared with mice that received HSS Id or NoMoIgG. When stimulated with SEA, 8WkId, or MSS Id, spleen cells from mice neonatally injected with 8WkId or MSS Id produced more interferon γ than spleen cells from mice neonatally injected with HSS Id or NoMoIgG. Furthermore, neonatal exposure to 8WkId or MSS Id, but not NoMoIgG or HSS Id, led to significantly smaller granuloma size and lower hepatic fibrosis levels in infected mice. Together, these results indicate that perinatal exposure to appropriate anti-SEA Ids induces long-term effects on survival, pathology, and immune response patterns in mice subsequently infected with S. mansoni.
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