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  • Title: Prostaglandin-mediated suppression of delayed-type hypersensitivity to infected erythrocytes during Babesia microti infection in mice.
    Author: Ruebush MJ, Steel LK, Kennedy DA.
    Journal: Cell Immunol; 1986 Apr 01; 98(2):300-10. PubMed ID: 2944617.
    Abstract:
    The mechanism of suppression of delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) to intraerythrocytic Babesia microti which occurs during infection in mice was examined. The suppression was not specific for anti-parasite DTH; infected mice immunized and challenged with sheep red blood cells had a similar depression of anti-sheep red blood cell DTH. Sublethal or lethal irradiation did not significantly alter the suppression of the DTH response, and cyclophosphamide pretreatment of infected mice also had no effect on suppression. Multiple passive transfer experiments using serum or regional lymph node cells from immunized or infected and immunized (suppressed) donor animals failed to demonstrate any ability to transfer suppression of DTH. Adherent cells from the spleens or peritoneal exudates of suppressed mice, however, did significantly depress the ability of immunized mice to express a DTH response. The cells responsible for this suppression were Thy 1- and nonspecific esterase+. Treatment of suppressive cell populations with 10 micrograms/ml indomethacin for 24 hr in vitro abrogated their suppressive ability, and in vivo administration of indomethacin to suppressed mice also restored DTH to normal levels. By examining levels of prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) in supernates of cultured peritoneal exudate cells from immune or suppressed mice, it was shown that infected mice had peritoneal exudate cells which produced significantly more PGE2 than similar cells from immune mice. These data suggest that B. microti infection elicits synthesis of PGE2 by macrophage-like cells which results in suppression of DTH to parasite as well as heterologous antigens.
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