Comparison of immune responses to Loa loa stage-specific antigen extracts in Loa loa-exposed BALB/c mice upon clearance of infection

Abstract Background Different immune mechanisms are capable of killing developmental stages of filarial nematodes and these mechanisms are also likely to vary between the primary and a challenge infection. However, the lack of a detailed analysis of cytokine, chemokine and immunoglobulin levels in h...

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Main Authors: Valerine C. Chunda, Manuel Ritter, Ayukenchengamba Bate, Narcisse V. T. Gandjui, Mathias E. Esum, Fanny F. Fombad, Abdel J. Njouendou, Patrick W. C. Ndongmo, Mark J. Taylor, Achim Hoerauf, Laura E. Layland, Joseph D. Turner, Samuel Wanji
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-02-01
Series:Parasites & Vectors
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s13071-020-3921-x
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spelling doaj-a834dbf3f7084fdeaad7877732e1e6f22021-02-07T12:12:14ZengBMCParasites & Vectors1756-33052020-02-0113111210.1186/s13071-020-3921-xComparison of immune responses to Loa loa stage-specific antigen extracts in Loa loa-exposed BALB/c mice upon clearance of infectionValerine C. Chunda0Manuel Ritter1Ayukenchengamba Bate2Narcisse V. T. Gandjui3Mathias E. Esum4Fanny F. Fombad5Abdel J. Njouendou6Patrick W. C. Ndongmo7Mark J. Taylor8Achim Hoerauf9Laura E. Layland10Joseph D. Turner11Samuel Wanji12Parasite and Vector Biology Research Unit, Department of Microbiology and Parasitology, Faculty of Science, University of BueaInstitute of Medical Microbiology, Immunology and Parasitology (IMMIP), Medical Faculty, University of BonnParasite and Vector Biology Research Unit, Department of Microbiology and Parasitology, Faculty of Science, University of BueaParasite and Vector Biology Research Unit, Department of Microbiology and Parasitology, Faculty of Science, University of BueaParasite and Vector Biology Research Unit, Department of Microbiology and Parasitology, Faculty of Science, University of BueaParasite and Vector Biology Research Unit, Department of Microbiology and Parasitology, Faculty of Science, University of BueaParasite and Vector Biology Research Unit, Department of Microbiology and Parasitology, Faculty of Science, University of BueaParasite and Vector Biology Research Unit, Department of Microbiology and Parasitology, Faculty of Science, University of BueaCentre for Drugs and Diagnostics Research, Department of Tropical Disease Biology, Liverpool School of Tropical MedicineInstitute of Medical Microbiology, Immunology and Parasitology (IMMIP), Medical Faculty, University of BonnInstitute of Medical Microbiology, Immunology and Parasitology (IMMIP), Medical Faculty, University of BonnCentre for Drugs and Diagnostics Research, Department of Tropical Disease Biology, Liverpool School of Tropical MedicineParasite and Vector Biology Research Unit, Department of Microbiology and Parasitology, Faculty of Science, University of BueaAbstract Background Different immune mechanisms are capable of killing developmental stages of filarial nematodes and these mechanisms are also likely to vary between the primary and a challenge infection. However, the lack of a detailed analysis of cytokine, chemokine and immunoglobulin levels in human loiasis is still evident. Therefore, detailed analysis of immune responses induced by the different developmental stages of Loa loa in immune-competent BALB/c mice will aid in the characterization of distinct immune responses that are important for the immunity against loiasis. Methods Different developmental stages of L. loa were obtained from human peripheral blood (microfilariae, MF), the transmitting vector, Chrysops (larval stage 3, L3) and infected immune-deficient BALB/cRAG2γc−/− mice (L4, L5, adult worms). Groups of wildtype BALB/c mice were then injected with the isolated stages and after 42 days post-infection (pi), systemic cytokine, chemokine and immunoglobulin levels were determined. These were then compared to L. loa-specific responses from in vitro re-stimulated splenocytes from individual mice. All parameters were determined using Luminex technology. Results In a pilot study, BALB/c mice cleared the different life stages of L. loa within 42 days pi and systemic cytokine, chemokine and immunoglobulin levels were equal between infected and naive mice. Nevertheless, L. loa-specific re-stimulation of splenocytes from mice infected with L5, MF or adult worms led to induction of Th2, Th17 and chemokine secretion patterns. Conclusions This study shows that although host immunity remains comparable to naive mice, clearance of L. loa life-cycle development stages can induce immune cell memory leading to cytokine, chemokine and immunoglobulins secretion patterns which might contribute to immunity and protection against reinfection.https://doi.org/10.1186/s13071-020-3921-xRecall immune responsesRe-stimulationImmunoglobulinsChemokinesCytokinesMicrofilariae
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Valerine C. Chunda
Manuel Ritter
Ayukenchengamba Bate
Narcisse V. T. Gandjui
Mathias E. Esum
Fanny F. Fombad
Abdel J. Njouendou
Patrick W. C. Ndongmo
Mark J. Taylor
Achim Hoerauf
Laura E. Layland
Joseph D. Turner
Samuel Wanji
spellingShingle Valerine C. Chunda
Manuel Ritter
Ayukenchengamba Bate
Narcisse V. T. Gandjui
Mathias E. Esum
Fanny F. Fombad
Abdel J. Njouendou
Patrick W. C. Ndongmo
Mark J. Taylor
Achim Hoerauf
Laura E. Layland
Joseph D. Turner
Samuel Wanji
Comparison of immune responses to Loa loa stage-specific antigen extracts in Loa loa-exposed BALB/c mice upon clearance of infection
Parasites & Vectors
Recall immune responses
Re-stimulation
Immunoglobulins
Chemokines
Cytokines
Microfilariae
author_facet Valerine C. Chunda
Manuel Ritter
Ayukenchengamba Bate
Narcisse V. T. Gandjui
Mathias E. Esum
Fanny F. Fombad
Abdel J. Njouendou
Patrick W. C. Ndongmo
Mark J. Taylor
Achim Hoerauf
Laura E. Layland
Joseph D. Turner
Samuel Wanji
author_sort Valerine C. Chunda
title Comparison of immune responses to Loa loa stage-specific antigen extracts in Loa loa-exposed BALB/c mice upon clearance of infection
title_short Comparison of immune responses to Loa loa stage-specific antigen extracts in Loa loa-exposed BALB/c mice upon clearance of infection
title_full Comparison of immune responses to Loa loa stage-specific antigen extracts in Loa loa-exposed BALB/c mice upon clearance of infection
title_fullStr Comparison of immune responses to Loa loa stage-specific antigen extracts in Loa loa-exposed BALB/c mice upon clearance of infection
title_full_unstemmed Comparison of immune responses to Loa loa stage-specific antigen extracts in Loa loa-exposed BALB/c mice upon clearance of infection
title_sort comparison of immune responses to loa loa stage-specific antigen extracts in loa loa-exposed balb/c mice upon clearance of infection
publisher BMC
series Parasites & Vectors
issn 1756-3305
publishDate 2020-02-01
description Abstract Background Different immune mechanisms are capable of killing developmental stages of filarial nematodes and these mechanisms are also likely to vary between the primary and a challenge infection. However, the lack of a detailed analysis of cytokine, chemokine and immunoglobulin levels in human loiasis is still evident. Therefore, detailed analysis of immune responses induced by the different developmental stages of Loa loa in immune-competent BALB/c mice will aid in the characterization of distinct immune responses that are important for the immunity against loiasis. Methods Different developmental stages of L. loa were obtained from human peripheral blood (microfilariae, MF), the transmitting vector, Chrysops (larval stage 3, L3) and infected immune-deficient BALB/cRAG2γc−/− mice (L4, L5, adult worms). Groups of wildtype BALB/c mice were then injected with the isolated stages and after 42 days post-infection (pi), systemic cytokine, chemokine and immunoglobulin levels were determined. These were then compared to L. loa-specific responses from in vitro re-stimulated splenocytes from individual mice. All parameters were determined using Luminex technology. Results In a pilot study, BALB/c mice cleared the different life stages of L. loa within 42 days pi and systemic cytokine, chemokine and immunoglobulin levels were equal between infected and naive mice. Nevertheless, L. loa-specific re-stimulation of splenocytes from mice infected with L5, MF or adult worms led to induction of Th2, Th17 and chemokine secretion patterns. Conclusions This study shows that although host immunity remains comparable to naive mice, clearance of L. loa life-cycle development stages can induce immune cell memory leading to cytokine, chemokine and immunoglobulins secretion patterns which might contribute to immunity and protection against reinfection.
topic Recall immune responses
Re-stimulation
Immunoglobulins
Chemokines
Cytokines
Microfilariae
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s13071-020-3921-x
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