1. Cell-Mediated Hypersensitivity in Rabbits Infected with Trypanosoma brucei and Trypanosoma rhodesiense
- Author
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Ian Tizard and M.A. Soltys
- Subjects
Trypanosoma ,Time Factors ,Injections, Intradermal ,Trypanosoma brucei brucei ,Immunology ,Spleen ,Cross Reactions ,Trypanosoma brucei ,Microbiology ,Cell mediated hypersensitivity ,Antigen ,Trypanosomiasis ,medicine ,Animals ,Hypersensitivity, Delayed ,Antigens ,Skin ,Skin Tests ,biology ,Inoculation ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Virology ,Infectious Diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Delayed hypersensitivity ,Parasitology ,Rabbits - Abstract
Animals infected with strains of Trypanosoma brucei and T. rhodesiense exhibited cutaneous hypersensitivity to intradermal administration of antigen. This reactivity was of two types, an Arthus-type, antibody-mediated reaction which reached maximum intensity 4 hr after injection and a delayed-type, cell-mediated reaction which reached maximum intensity 24 hr after injection. This delayed-type hypersensitivity appeared in rabbits not earlier than 3 weeks after onset of infection. It did not occur in animals which received dead organisms. There was a cross-reaction in both types of reactivity between antigens prepared from T. brucei and T. rhodesiense . The delayed-type hypersensitivity was transferred to normal rabbits by intravenous inoculation of washed living cells from the spleen of a rabbit which showed delayed hypersensitivity. Dead cells failed to transfer hypersensitivity. The histological picture of the indurated area was typical of a delayed-type reaction.
- Published
- 1971
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