Abstract
Murine Lyme borreliosis, caused by infection with the spirochete Borrelia burgdorferi, results in acute arthritis and carditis that regress as a result of B. burgdorferi-specific immune responses. B. burgdorferi-specific antibodies can attenuate arthritis in mice deficient in both B cells and T cells but have no effect on carditis. Because macrophages comprise the principal immune cell in carditis, T-cell responses that augment cell-mediated immunity may be important for carditis regression. To investigate this hypothesis, we examined the course of Lyme carditis in mice selectively deficient in B cells or αβ T cells. Our results show that carditis regresses in B-cell-deficient B10.Ak mice but not in αβ T-cell-deficient mice, independently of the mouse strain background. Despite prominent macrophage infiltrates, hearts from B. burgdorferi-infected αβ T-cell-deficient mice had less mRNA for tumor necrosis factor alpha as measured by reverse transcription-PCR compared to infected control mice. Anti-inflammatory cytokine mRNA levels were equivalent. Adoptive transfer of gamma interferon-secreting CD4+ T cells into infected αβ T-cell-deficient mice promoted carditis resolution. These results show that αβ T cells can promote resolution of murine Lyme carditis and are the first demonstration of a beneficial role for CD4+ T helper 1 cells in this disease.
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CITATION STYLE
Bockenstedt, L. K., Kang, I., Chang, C., Persing, D., Hayday, A., & Barthold, S. W. (2001). CD4+ helper 1 cells facilitate regression of murine lyme carditis. Infection and Immunity, 69(9), 5264–5269. https://doi.org/10.1128/IAI.69.9.5264-5269.2001
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