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Infection and Immunity, August 2001, p. 4996-5000, Vol. 69, No. 8
Departments of
Pediatrics1 and
Medicine,3 University of California at
San Francisco, San Francisco, and Children's Hospital Oakland
Research Institute, Oakland,4 California, and
Lumbini Rana-Ambika Eye Hospital, Bhairahawa,
Nepal2
Received 13 March 2001/Returned for modification 7 May
2001/Accepted 8 May 2001
Although the host immune response to the 60-kDa chlamydial heat
shock protein (hsp60) has been implicated in trachoma pathogenesis, no
studies have examined mucosal immune responses to hsp60 in populations
for which chlamydia is endemic. Tears and sera from Nepali villagers
were reacted against hsp60 fusion proteins, whole hsp60, and the major
outer membrane protein (MOMP). Tears from villagers without disease
were anti-hsp60 immunoglobulin G (IgG) reactive in 6 (38%) of 16 villagers compared with 36 (90%) of 40 with follicular trachoma (TF)
(P < 0.001); 47 (89%) of 53 with inflammatory
trachoma (TI) (P < 0.001); and 31 (84%) of 37 with conjunctival scarring (TS) (P = 0.002). By
multivariate analysis, odds ratios for tear hsp60 IgG immunoreactivity
in villagers with TF, TI, and TS were 49.2 (confidence interval [CI],
2.7 to 898), 22.6 (CI, 3 to 170), and 13.6 (CI, 1.4 to 133),
respectively. There were no significant differences for tear IgA or
secretory IgA (sIgA) reactivity to hsp60 or for tear sIgA and IgG
reactivity to MOMP. Serum anti-hsp60 IgG immunoreactivity was
associated with TI only. These data suggest that anti-hsp60 IgG
immunoreactivity represents largely locally derived antibodies, which
may promote disease pathology. In contrast, nonspecific high rates of
anti-hsp60 sIgA antibodies suggest chronic or repeat stimulation from
an endemic source of organisms.
0019-9567/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/IAI.69.8.4996-5000.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Immune Response to Chlamydial 60-Kilodalton Heat
Shock Protein in Tears from Nepali Trachoma Patients
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Children's
Hospital Oakland Research Institute, 5700 Martin Luther King Jr. Way,
Oakland, CA 94609. Phone: (510) 450-7655. Fax: (510) 450-7910. E-mail: ddean{at}chori.org.
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