MACROPHAGE ACTIVITY IN MICE UNDERGOING CHRONIC GRAFTVERSUSHOST REACTIONS

Autor: ANTHONY, LAWRENCE S. D., STEVENSON, MARY M., LAPP, WAYNE S., KONGSHAVN, PATRICIA A. L.
Zdroj: Transplantation; November 1984, Vol. 38 Issue: 5 p536-541, 6p
Abstrakt: The functional state of the mononuclear phagocyte system has been investigated in mice undergoing chronic graft-versus-host (GVH) reactions (GVHR), initiated by the injection of parental DBA/2 lymphoid cells into (DBA/2·C57BL/6)F1hybrid mice. Macrophage function was assessed in vivo by the ability to develop host resistance to infection with Listeria monocytogenesand found to be normal in GVH mice, as measured by the development of resistance during the early phase of natural (macrophage-mediated) resistance to the infection. During the later phase of acquired immunity to listerial infection, GVH mice had lowered resistance, but this was attributed to impaired T cell immunity rather than to defective macrophage function. The inflammatory response to a phlogistic agent, thioglycolate, was also found to be normal in GVH mice, as measured by the accumulation of inflammatory macrophages in the peritoneal cavity. In an in vitro assessment of macrophage function, phagocytosis was found to be enhanced initially (2 weeks following GVHR induction) but it subsequently became depressed for the duration of the study (12 weeks after GVHR induction). Macrophage chemotactic activity was initially normal, then became depressed and remained so for the duration of the study. Thus, despite the profound suppression of specific immunity induced by the GVH reaction and the functional defects of GVH macrophages apparent in vitro, the response of the mononuclear phagocyte system to in vivo stimuli, such as infection or inflammation, is unimpaired in GVH mice.
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