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      Interactions between eosinophils and antibodies: in vivo protective role against rat schistosomiasis.

      Cellular Immunology
      Animals, Antibody Formation, Cell Adhesion, Cricetinae, Eosinophils, immunology, Immunization, Passive, Immunoglobulins, analysis, Mast Cells, Mesocricetus, Rats, Rosette Formation, Schistosoma mansoni, Schistosomiasis

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          Abstract

          An original protocol of cell transfer from Schistosoma mansoni-infected rats to normal recipient rats is used to investigate the protective role of phagocytic cell populations, described as effector cells in vitro, against a challenge infection with S. mansoni. Nonadherent, eosinophil-enriched and -adherent, macrophage-rich cell preparations, injected via intradermal and subcutaneous routes at the precise site of exposure to cercariae, were able to significantly protect the recipient rats. The time-course study of this protective effect according to the time after infection of donor rats revealed that eosinophils were the major cell population involved in the early phase of infection (4 to 5 weeks), whereas macrophages could also be incriminated thereafter. A rosette assay using anti-immunoglobulin-coated erythrocytes indicated a sequence of the various antibody isotypes under study (IgG1, IgG2a, IgE) on the eosinophil surface, during the course of infection. As previously shown in vitro, cytophilic antibodies seemed to participate in the protective effect of eosinophils, since eosinophil-enriched cells from normal rats, sensitized in vitro with immune complexes present in infected rat serum, could also confer significant protection. These observations establish therefore the relevance between our previous in vitro studies and rat resistance to a challenge infection with S. mansoni, underlining the major role played by the interaction between antibodies and phagocytic cells (eosinophils and macrophages).

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