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CELLULAR CHANGES IN THE INTESTINAL LYMPH OF SHEEP INFECTED WITH THE ENTERIC NEMATODE, TRICHOSTRONGYLUS COLUBRIFORMIS
Author(s) -
Adams DB,
Cripps AW
Publication year - 1977
Publication title -
australian journal of experimental biology and medical science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.999
H-Index - 104
eISSN - 1440-1711
pISSN - 0004-945X
DOI - 10.1038/icb.1977.51
Subject(s) - enteric virus , biology , trichostrongylus , nematode , lymph , microbiology and biotechnology , feces , medicine , ecology , pathology
Summary Some changes produced in the cell populations of intestinal lymph by infection with the enteric nematode Trichostrongylus colubriformis. were studied in sheep regularly re‐infused with all discharged lymph. Lymphocyte traffic through the intestinal lymphatic duct was reduced until day 35 of primary infection, mainly due lo the‐ absence of lymphocytes with smaller cell volumes but was increased two‐fold after day 70 and in immune sheep. Antigen‐reactive lymphocytes in Mood and lymph were assayed by the uptake of: 3 H‐thymidine in cell culture stimulated by extracts from the larvae of T. colubriformis. Cells from the blood and lymph of immune sheep were highly reactive to worm antigen. A relatively smaller reactivity was present in the blood of worm‐free sheep and was abolished during the first 12 days of primary infection. Antigen‐reactive cells were not detected in intestinal lymph until 12 days after primary infection, mid in vitro antigen reactive in intestinal lymph of immune sheep was increased after challenge with infective larvae. Responses to the mitogens, concanavalin A and phytohaemagglutinin in cultures of cells from both intestinal lymph and blood were depressed on days 7 and 12 of primary infection. It is proposed that the diminished traffic of lymphocytes in intestinal lymph and the reduced numbers of mitogen and nematode antigen‐reactive lymphocytes in both blood and intestinal lymph during the early stages of infection with T. colubriformis is closely related to the slow development of protective immunity to this parasite.

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