Trypanosoma cruzi-induced suppression of IL-2 production. I. Evidence for the presence of IL-2-producing cells
- PMID: 2965729
Trypanosoma cruzi-induced suppression of IL-2 production. I. Evidence for the presence of IL-2-producing cells
Abstract
Mice infected with the protozoan parasite Trypanosoma cruzi, the causative agent of human Chagas' disease, are profoundly immunodepressed in their response to various Ag and mitogens. A key factor in this immunosuppression is the essential inability to produce the T cell growth factor IL-2. In this study we demonstrate that this failure to produce IL-2 in response to mitogen stimulation is not the result of the absence of production of soluble or membrane-bound IL-1 by macrophages. Limiting dilution analysis of the precursor frequency of IL-2 producers suggests that an adequate number of precursors for IL-2 production are present in the spleens of infected mice, but that their activity may be regulated by suppressor cells. The presence of precursor cells for IL-2 production is supported by experiments showing that the combination of calcium ionophores and PMA elicits IL-2 production by spleen cells from both normal and T. cruzi-infected mice. Although Con A can provide either of the signals necessary for IL-2 production, calcium flux or protein kinase C activation, to T cells from normal mice, Con A in combination with either calcium ionophore or phorbol ester failed to activate T cells from infected mice to produce IL-2. Preculture of spleen cells from infected mice for 48 to 72 h before addition of Con A results in near normal production of IL-2. This recovery of the capacity to produce IL-2 does not occur if parasite Ag is present during the preculture period. These results suggest that the inability of T cells from T. cruzi-infected mice to produce IL-2 in vitro in response to Con A is not due to the lack of IL-2-producing cells, but may be the result of the maturational state of the T cells or to the presence of a suppressor population.
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