In mice repeated systemic injections of Pseudomonas aeruginosa viable cells were able to induce a specific delayed-type hypersensitivity, which was evaluated as increase both in footpad swelling and in the weight of popliteal lymph nodes, after a challenge in the footpad. Unfractionated spleen cells or T lymphocyte-enriched spleen cells from sensitized donors were able to specifically transfer the delayed-type hypersensitivity to syngeneic recipients but failed to protect them against a lethal challenge with P. aeruginosa. In contrast, serum or B lymphocyte and macrophage-enriched spleen cells from the same donors were capable of transferring protective immunity but failed to induce any delayed-type hypersensitivity reaction in the recipients. These results clearly show that in systemic P. aeruginosa infections a dissociation between delayed-type hypersensitivity and acquired cellular resistance occurs.
Bacterial pyelonephritis was induced in mice by direct microinoculation of Pseudomonas aeruginosa in the kidney. In the acute phase of P. aeruginosa pyelonephritis, a state of cell-mediated immunity impairment, evaluated both in vitro as lymphocyte reactivity to concanavalin A and in vivo as host versus graft reaction has been observed. Furthermore, delayed-type hypersensitivity to specific bacterial antigen has been detected only when the kidney infection was subsiding, i.e., 3 weeks after bacteria inoculation. When investigating the mechanism of such T-cell impairment, we were unable to transfer the immunodepression, suggesting that suppressor cells are not involved in vivo. The role of P. aeruginosa inhibition of cell-mediated immunity in the pyelonephritic host is discussed.
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