Schistosoma japonwum-infected mice were treated with antibodies to interleukin-5 (IL-5) or gamma interferon (IFN-'y) from week 3 or 4 to week 10 of infection. Neither antibody affected egg production by the parasite, and neither had a consistent effect on the secretion of IFN-y or IL-5 cell-related cytokines by spleen cells from infected mice. Mice treated with antibody to murine IL-5 had only rare eosinophils in hepatic circumoval granulomas. Granulomas around single eggs were reduced in volume by a third, but hepatic fibrosis was unaffected. Treatment with antibody to murine IFN-y also reduced the size of granulomas and also did not affect hepatic fibrosis, which was measured as hydroxyproline. Our results, taken together with the studies of others, indicate that a complex interaction of cytokines affects granuloma size and that the size and fibrosis of granulomas are to some extent regulated independently.
Cytokines are important in the cell-mediated response to Schistosoma mansoni eggs. We have found that Th2 cytokine responses (e.g. IL-4 and IL-5) are augmented after egg laying begins while Th1 responses (IL-2 and IFN-gamma) are down regulated in S. mansoni infected mice. Treatment of mice with anti-IL-5 monoclonal antibodies (Mab) suppressed the eosinophil response almost completely but did not affect granuloma size and slightly increased hepatic fibrosis. Anti-IL-4 treatment abolished IgE responses in infected mice and decreased hepatic fibrosis slightly. Anti-IFN-gamma treatment had no effect on hepatic pathology. Anti-IL-2 treatment decreased granuloma size significantly and decreased hepatic fibrosis markedly. Anti-IL-2 treatment dramatically decreased IL-5 secretion by splenic cells in vitro and decreased peripheral blood and tissue eosinophilia. In contrast IL-4 secretion was unaffected and serum IgE was normal or increased. IL-2 and IFN-gamma secretion by splenic cells of treated mice were slightly but not significantly increased suggesting that anti-IL-2 treatment is affecting Th2 rather than Th1 responses.
Recent studies indicate that egg granuloma formation in murine Schistosoma mansoni infection is associated with Th2-mediated immune responses. The present study was designed to analyze dynamically the Thl and Th2 responses in S. japonicum-infected animals and compare them with the results seen with S. mansoni. C3H mice were infected with 10 to 20 cercariae of S. japonicum and sacrificed 3 to 22 weeks later. Spleen cells were stimulated with parasite antigens (egg and adult worm) or the mitogen concanavalin A. Interleukin-2 (IL-2), IL-4, IL-5, and gamma interferon (IFN-y) levels were measured in the culture supernatants by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) or bioassays. Additionally, cytokine-producing cells were enumerated by ELISPOT. The results show that Th2 cytokine production, characterized by IL-4 and IL-5, represents the major response in the first month after egg laying begins, while the Thl functions of IFN-y and IL-2 production are greatly depressed. However, by 22 weeks Th2 responses have diminished and IFN-y production in response to concanavalin A is apparent. IL-2 responses are minimal at all times. In vitro depletion of T-cell subsets indicates that CD4+ cells are the major subset responsible for production of IL-5 at 7 weeks of infection. These findings suggest that, as in the case of S. mansoni infection, S. japonicum-induced immunopathology is temporally associated with the host Th2 response, although other experiments indicate that IFN-y is also involved.
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