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Infection and Immunity, September 1999, p. 4661-4667, Vol. 67, No. 9
James A. Baker Institute for Animal
Health1 and Department of Microbiology
and Immunology,2 College of Veterinary
Medicine, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 14853
Received 12 March 1999/Returned for modification 11 May
1999/Accepted 3 June 1999
The antibody response to the L1 stage of Trichinella
spiralis has been described as biphasic. Worms resident in the
intestine during the first week of infection stimulate an antibody
response against a subset of larval proteins. L1 larvae in the muscle
at the end stage of infection stimulate a second antibody response against tyvelose-bearing glycoproteins. Antityvelose antibodies protect
rats against challenge infection with larvae. The aim of this study was
to characterize the rat B-cell response against larval antigens during
the intestinal phase of T. spiralis infection and to test
the antiparasitic effects of such antibodies. Strain PVG rats were
infected orally with 500 larvae. Antibodies specific for
phosphorylcholine-bearing proteins of L1 larvae first appeared in serum
9 days postinfection. Absorption experiments showed that the majority
of antilarval antibodies produced in rats 16 days after infection with
T. spiralis were specific for phosphorylcholine-bearing proteins. A fraction of these antibodies bound to free
phosphorylcholine. Immunoglobulin G2c (IgG2c) producing cells in the
mesenteric lymph node dominated this early antibody response. IgG2c is
associated with T-independent immune responses in the rat; however, a
comparison of athymic rats with euthymic controls suggested that only a
small fraction of the phosphorylcholine-related antibody response
against T. spiralis was T independent. Phosphorylcholine is
a common epitope in antigens of bacteria and nematode parasites and has
been shown to be a target of protective immunity in certain bacteria. A
monoclonal IgG2c antibody was prepared from infected rats and shown to
be specific for phosphorylcholine. Monoclonal
phosphorylcholine-specific IgG2c failed to protect rats against
intestinal infection with T. spiralis. Therefore, our
findings do not support a role for phosphorylcholine-bearing antigens
in immune defense against T. spiralis; however, the potency
of the immune response induced suggests an immunomodulatory role for
the lymphocytes involved.
0019-9567/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Dominance of Immunoglobulin G2c in the Antiphosphorylcholine
Response of Rats Infected with Trichinella
spiralis


*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: James A. Baker
Institute for Animal Health, College of Veterinary Medicine, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853. Phone: (607) 256-5600. Fax: (607) 256-5608. E-mail: jaa2{at}cornell.edu.
Present address: College of Medicine, Cornell University, New York,
NY 10021.
Present address: American Veterinary Medical Association,
Schaumburg, IL 60173-4360.
§
Present address: Department of Biomedical Sciences, San Francisco,
CA 94143.
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