Mice maintained on a low protein diet for 30 days and then infected with Schistosoma mansoni for 16 weeks completely failed to develop 'pipestem fibrosis' of the liver, whereas 50% of well nourished controls did. Usually mice with relatively mild and prolonged S. mansoni infection develop two different pathological pictures: one consisting of disseminated portal fibrosis caused by periovular granulomas concentrated at the portal spaces (pipestem fibrosis), the other represented by scattered hepatic granulomas. The reason for this dual response is poorly understood. Combined results from parasitological, histopathological, biochemical and morphometric data revealed that peri-ovular granulomas of undernourished mice were smaller, inflammation was less intense and there was minimal fibrosis in comparison with those of controls, which suggest that a vigorous host response is necessary for the pathogenesis of schistosomal portal fibrosis.
We previously demonstrated that mice subjected to a hypoproteinic diet showed milder chronic lesions on infection with Schistosoma mansoni than normally fed mice. Here we compare the immune response of well-nourished and undernourished mice with chronic S. mansoni infection. The proliferative response and cytokine (IFN-gamma and IL-5) production of splenocytes from undernourished mice against the soluble egg antigen (SEA) of S. mansoni or concanavalin A was similar to that of well-nourished mice. The levels of SEA-specific IgG1, IgG2b and IgG3 antibodies were significantly higher in the sera of well-nourished mice in comparison with undernourished mice. Undernourished animals also exhibited diminished periovular granuloma size compared to well-nourished infected controls. Our results support the importance of host nutritional status in the humoral immune response of mice and its effects on the development of periovular granulomas in malnourished animals infected with S. mansoni.
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