The subcutaneous movements of filarial infective larvae are impaired in vaccinated hosts in comparison to primary infected hosts.

Simon A Babayan, Tarik Attout, Phat N Vuong, Laetitia Le Goff, Jean-Charles Gantier, Odile Bain
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引用次数: 11

Abstract

Our aim in this study was to observe the movements of filarial infective larvae following inoculation into the mammalian host and to assess the effect of vaccination on larval migration, in situ. Here we present recordings of larvae progressing through the subcutaneous tissues and inguinal lymph node of primary infected or vaccinated mice. We used the filaria Litomosoides sigmodontis in BALB/c mice that were necropsied 6 hours after the challenge inoculation of 200 larvae. Subcutaneous tissue sections were taken from the inoculation site and larvae were filmed in order to quantify their movements. Our analyses showed that the subcutaneous larvae were less motile in the vaccinated mice than in primary-infected mice and had more leucocytes attached to the cuticle. We propose that this reduced motility may result in the failure of a majority of larvae to evade the inflammatory reaction, thereby being a possible mechanism involved in the early vaccine-induced protection.

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

与初次感染的宿主相比,接种疫苗的宿主的丝虫病感染幼虫的皮下运动受到损害。
本研究的目的是观察丝虫感染幼虫在接种到哺乳动物宿主后的运动,并评估接种对幼虫原位迁移的影响。在这里,我们提出的记录幼虫通过皮下组织和腹股沟淋巴结的原发性感染或接种小鼠。我们对200只BALB/c小鼠攻毒接种6小时后死亡的BALB/c小鼠进行了simooides sigmodontis实验。从接种部位取皮下组织切片,并拍摄幼虫,以量化其运动。我们的分析表明,接种疫苗的小鼠皮下幼虫比初次感染的小鼠更不活跃,并且在角质层上附着更多的白细胞。我们认为,这种运动能力的降低可能导致大多数幼虫无法逃避炎症反应,因此可能是早期疫苗诱导保护的一种机制。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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