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The peripheral immune response of mice infected with a neuropathogenic schistosome

Publication at Faculty of Science, First Faculty of Medicine |
2020

Abstract

Trichobilharzia regenti (Schistosomatidae) percutaneously infects birds and mammals and invades their central nervous system (CNS). Here, we characterized the peripheral immune response of infected mice and showed how it was influenced by the parasite-induced inflammation in the skin and the CNS.

As revealed by flow cytometry, T cells expanded in the spleen and the CNS-draining lymph nodes 7-14 days post-infection. Both T-bet+ and GATA-3+ T cells were markedly elevated suggesting a mixed type 1/2 immune response.

However, it dropped after 7 dpi most likely being unaffected by the neuroinflammation. Splenocytes from infected mice produced a high amount of IFN-gamma and, to a lesser extent, IL-10, IL-4 and IL-17 after in vitro stimulation by cercarial homogenate.

Nevertheless, it had only a limited capacity to alter the maturation status of bone marrow-derived dendritic cells (BMDCs), contrary to the recombinant T. regenti cathepsin B2, which also strongly augmented expression of Ccl5, Cxcl10, Il12a, Il33 and Il10 by BMDCs. Taken together, mice infected with T. regenti developed the mixed type 1/2 immune response, which was driven by the early skin inflammation rather than the late neuroinflammation.

Parasite peptidases might play an active role in triggering the host immune response.