VACCINATION AGAINST BABESIA-BOVIS - T-CELLS FROM PROTECTED AND UNPROTECTED ANIMALS SHOW DIFFERENT CYTOKINE PROFILES

Citation
Ij. East et al., VACCINATION AGAINST BABESIA-BOVIS - T-CELLS FROM PROTECTED AND UNPROTECTED ANIMALS SHOW DIFFERENT CYTOKINE PROFILES, International journal for parasitology, 27(12), 1997, pp. 1537-1545
Citations number
28
ISSN journal
00207519
Volume
27
Issue
12
Year of publication
1997
Pages
1537 - 1545
Database
ISI
SICI code
0020-7519(1997)27:12<1537:VAB-TF>2.0.ZU;2-0
Abstract
Vaccination of cattle against the haemoprotozoan parasite, Babesia bov is, with the recombinant antigen 11C5 resulted in 9 of 15 cattle being protected against challenge infection. The cellular immune responses of protected and unprotected cattle were compared in order to identify differences in response. No differences were observed in the pattern of change in various blood leukocyte populations throughout challenge infection. FACScan analysis revealed an increase in the proportion of cells bearing the CD2 marker in both protected and unprotected cattle over the course of infection. There were no observable differences in the frequency of various cell-surface markers between the unprotected and protected cattle. During the period of patent parasitaemia, in vit ro cultures of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) from protecte d cattle produced significantly more TNF-alpha (P < 0.05) than culture s from unprotected cattle. TNF-alpha concentrations remained at pre-ch allenge levels until day 10, when levels in the unvaccinated control a nd vaccinated/unprotected animals dropped. By peak parasitaemia, TNF-a lpha production in vitro was significantly greater (P < 0.05) in cultu res of PBMCs from protected cattle. Interferon production showed an in itial peak at day 5 in all cattle, followed by a decrease and a second peak at days 10-13 in protected cattle only, which coincided with res olution of the infection. (C) 1997 Australian Society for Parasitology . Published by Elsevier Science Ltd.