Onchocerca volvulus is an obligate human parasite, and its study has been difficult due to an inability to maintain it outside the human host. We report the successful transplantation of onchocercomata containing living adult O. volvulus worms into immunodeficient C.B.-17.scid/scid (scid) mice or athymic rnu/rnu (nude) rats. Living, motile worms containing viable microfilariae were present in onchocercomata recovered from scid mice or nude rats for up to 20 wk, establishing a novel animal model for future investigation of O. volvulus.
Shipment of infective-stage filarial larvae (L3s) usually has been accomplished by transporting living infected vectors or L3s cryopreserved in liquid nitrogen. Our objective was to find culture conditions for transporting L3s that would promote survival of Brugia malayi larvae without altering their capacity to infect susceptible animals. In preliminary studies we observed that Ham's nutrient mixture F-12, with antibiotics and 1% fetal calf serum, could support L3s without apparent development for at least 10 days. In order to evaluate the effect of culture temperatures on infectivity, fresh L3s were divided into groups that were either immediately injected into jirds (infectivity control) or incubated for 24, 48, or 120 hr in tightly sealed tubes maintained horizontally at either 0 C, 20 C, or 37 C, before they were injected into jirds. Necropsies were performed on the jirds 120-130 days after injection to recover and count adult worms. Levels of microfilaremia were also determined. We found that L3s held overnight at 0 C, although apparently viable, were unable to survive in jirds. However, larvae kept at 20 C and 37 C produced patent infections with adult worms in normal locations even after 120 hr of in vitro cultivation. There was no statistical difference in mean worm recovery or size of worms from jirds infected with freshly harvested L3s and jirds injected with larvae that were maintained overnight at 20 C or 37 C. When cultured L3s were shipped from Michigan to Connecticut by overnight air courier, along with infected living mosquitos, the L3s appeared to be 99% viable upon arrival. L3s shipped in F-12 produced patent infections in C.B.-17 scid/scid mice with worm recoveries comparable to those observed in mice injected with L3s freshly obtained from shipped mosquitos.
Mice are resistant to the establishment of infection with the nematode parasite Brugia malayi, an etiologic agent of human lymphatic filariasis. We have recently shown that T and B lymphocyte-deficient C.B.-17 scid/scid mice are permissive for infection with this parasite, whereas coisogenic C.B.-17+/+ mice are resistant. This observation suggests that T and B lymphocytes that comprise the antigen-specific immune system orchestrate murine resistance to B. malayi. In order to define the component of the antigen-specific immune response that is responsible for this resistance, we have tested the susceptibility of beta 2M-/- mice to infection with B. malayi L3 larvae. These mice are homozygous for insertional disruption of their B2m genes, which encode beta 2-microglobulin, the small subunit of the major histocompatibility (MHC) antigens. They do not express beta 2-microglobulin and, as a consequence, fail to express the class I major histocompatibility antigens, and they do not develop the CD8+ class I MHC-restricted cytotoxic T cell subset. We find that these mice are completely resistant to B. malayi, indicating that the CD8+ T lymphocyte subset is not an obligate requirement for murine resistance to human filarial parasites.
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