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Infection and Immunity, June 1999, p. 2916-2919, Vol. 67, No. 6
0019-9567/99/$04.00+0

Genes Influencing Resistance to Coccidioides immitis and the Interleukin-10 Response Map to Chromosomes 4 and 6 in Mice

Joshua Fierer,1,2,* Lorraine Walls,3 Fred Wright,4 and Theo N. Kirkland1,2

Departments of Medicine1 and Pathology,2 Veterans Administration San Diego Healthcare System and University of California---San Diego School of Medicine, and Veterans Administration Research Service,3 San Diego, California, and Division of Human Cancer Genetics and the Comprehensive Cancer Center, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio4

Received 14 January 1999/Returned for modification 11 February 1999/Accepted 25 March 1999

Coccidioidomycosis is a fungal infection that is endemic in the southwestern United States. Infection is more severe in blacks and Filipinos, which suggests that there is a genetic basis for susceptibility to this infection in humans. We found that there is also a difference in resistance to Coccidioides immitis infection among inbred mouse strains: B6 mice are susceptible, while DBA/2 mice are resistant (T. N. Kirkland and J. Fierer, Infect. Immun. 40:912-916, 1983). In this paper we report the results of our efforts to map the genes responsible for resistance to this infection in mice. Mice were infected by intraperitoneal inoculation, and 15 days later the numbers of viable fungi in their lungs and spleens were enumerated. We also determined the amounts of interleukin-10 mRNA made in the infected lungs. These three phenotypes were mapped as quantitative traits by using the 26 available lines of recombinant inbred mice derived from a cross between B6 and DBA/2 mice. The best associations were those between the regions near the Lv locus on chromosome 4 and the Tnfr1 locus on chromosome 6. We then infected backcross mice [(B6 × DBA/2) × B6] and confirmed these associations; 14 of 16 (87%) mice that were heterozygous at both Lv and Tnfr1 were resistant to infection, whereas only 4 of 16 (25%) mice that were homozygous B6 at both loci were resistant. These are the first genetic loci to be associated with susceptibility to C. immitis, but there may be additional genes involved in murine resistance to this infection.


* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Infectious Diseases Section (111F), VA San Diego Healthcare System, 3350 La Jolla Village Dr., San Diego, CA 92161. Phone: (619) 552-7446. Fax: (619) 552-4398. E-mail: jfierer{at}ucsd.edu.


Infection and Immunity, June 1999, p. 2916-2919, Vol. 67, No. 6
0019-9567/99/$04.00+0



This article has been cited by other articles:

  • Jimenez, M. d. P., Walls, L., Fierer, J. (2006). High Levels of Interleukin-10 Impair Resistance to Pulmonary Coccidioidomycosis in Mice in Part through Control of Nitric Oxide Synthase 2 Expression.. Infect. Immun. 74: 3387-3395 [Abstract] [Full Text]  
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