Filaria-Induced Immune Evasion: Suppression by the Infective Stage of Brugia malayi at the Earliest Host-Parasite Interface

  • Semnani R
  • Law M
  • Kubofcik J
  • et al.
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Abstract

To assess the physiologic interactions between the infective stage of Brugia malayi—one of the extracellular parasites responsible for lymphatic filariasis in humans—and the APC with which they come in contact during their development and routes of travel, we have investigated the interaction between the infective stage (L3) of B. malayi and human Langerhans cells (LC) in the skin. Our data indicate that live L3 result in increased migration of LC from the epidermis without affecting the viability of these cells and up-regulation of the IL-18 cytokine involved in LC migration. Live L3 also result in down-regulation of MHC class I and II on the LC cell surface. Additionally, microarray data indicate that live L3 significantly down-regulated expression of IL-8 as well as of multiple genes involved in Ag presentation, reducing the capacity of LC to induce CD4+ T cells in allogeneic MLR, and thus resulting in a decreased ability of LC to promote CD4+ T cell proliferation and production of IFN-γ and IL-10. These data suggest that L3 exert a down-regulatory response in epidermal LC that leads to a diminished capacity of these cells to activate CD4+ T cells.

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APA

Semnani, R. T., Law, M., Kubofcik, J., & Nutman, T. B. (2004). Filaria-Induced Immune Evasion: Suppression by the Infective Stage of Brugia malayi at the Earliest Host-Parasite Interface. The Journal of Immunology, 172(10), 6229–6238. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.172.10.6229

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