PMID: 2117033Sep 1, 1990Paper

Recombinant granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor restores deficient immune responses in mice with chronic Trypanosoma cruzi infections

The Journal of Immunology : Official Journal of the American Association of Immunologists
S G ReedP J Morrissey

Abstract

Spleen cells from mice with chronic Trypanosoma cruzi infection generate a minimal plaque-forming response to SRBC in vitro. Addition of granulocyte-macrophage (GM)-CSF to cultures of spleen cells from chronically infected mice restored the plaque-forming cells (PFC) response to normal levels. Splenic adherent cells from chronically infected mice were deficient in their ability to reconstitute the PFC response of accessory cell-depleted normal spleen cells. Preincubation of splenic adherent cells from infected mice with GM-CSF restored their ability to reconstitute the PFC response of adherent cell depleted cultures. Ia Ag expression by splenic adherent cells from chronically infected mice was significantly lower compared to Ia Ag expression of cells from normal mice. Incubation of splenic adherent cells from chronically infected mice for 48 h with GM-CSF increased levels of Ia Ag expression to approximately those of uninfected mice. Peritoneal macrophages from infected mice produced IL-1 after incubation with GM-CSF at levels equivalent to those produced by similarly treated control macrophages. Spleen cells from chronically infected mice showed significant induction of IL-2 mRNA after GM-CSF treatment, and the addition of the...Continue Reading

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