Plasmodium berghei XAT is an irradiation-induced attenuated variant derived from the lethal strain P. berghei NK65, and its blood-stage parasites are spontaneously cleared in immune competent mice. In the present study, we studied the mechanism of host resistance to blood-stage malaria infection using P. berghei XAT. Infection enhanced Ab-dependent phagocytosis of PRBC by splenic macrophages in wild-type C57BL/6 mice. In contrast, FcR γ-chain knockout (FcRγ−/−) mice, which lack the ability to mediate Ab-dependent phagocytosis and Ab-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity through FcγRI, FcγRII, and FcγRIII, could not induce Ab-dependent phagocytic activity. These FcRγ−/− mice showed increased susceptibility to the P. berghei XAT infection, with eventually fatal results, although they produced comparable amounts of IFN-γ by spleen cells and anti-XAT Abs in serum. In addition, passive transfer of anti-XAT IgG obtained from wild-type mice that had recovered from infection into FcRγ−/− mice could not suppress the increase in parasitemia, and almost all of these mice died after marked parasitemia. In contrast, passive transfer of anti-XAT IgG into control wild-type mice inhibited the increase in parasitemia. IFN-γ−/− mice, which were highly susceptible to the P. berghei XAT infection, failed to induce Ab-dependent phagocytic activity and also showed reduced production of serum anti-XAT IgG2a isotype compared with control wild-type mice. These results suggest that FcR-mediated Ab-dependent phagocytosis, which is located downstream of IFN-γ production, is important as an effector mechanism to eliminate PRBC in blood-stage P. berghei XAT infection.
Babesia microti produces a self-limiting infection in mice, and recovered mice are resistant to reinfection. In the present study, the role of T cells in protective immunity against challenge infection was examined. BALB/c mice which recovered from primary infection showed strong protective immunity against challenge infection. In contrast, nude mice which failed to control the primary infection and were cured with an antibabesial drug did not show protection against challenge infection. Treatment of immune mice with anti-CD4 monoclonal antibody (MAb) diminished the protective immunity against challenge infection, but treatment with anti-CD8 MAb had no effect on the protection. Transfer of CD4+ T-cell-depleted spleen cells resulted in higher parasitemia than transfer of CD8+ T-cell-depleted spleen cells. A high level of gamma interferon (IFN-γ), which was produced by CD4+ T cells, was observed for the culture supernatant of spleen cells from immune mice, and treatment of immune mice with anti-IFN-γ MAb partially reduced the protection. Moreover, no protection against challenge infection was found in IFN-γ-deficient mice. On the other hand, treatment of immune mice with MAbs against interleukin-2 (IL-2), IL-4, or tumor necrosis factor alpha did not affect protective immunity. These results suggest essential requirements for CD4+ T cells and IFN-γ in protective immunity against challenge infection with B. microti.
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