Antigen‑specific response of CD4+ T cells and hepatic lymph node cells to Fasciola hepatica‑derived molecules at the early and late stage of the infection in sheep
Author
Pérez Caballero, Raúl
Martínez Moreno, F. Javier
Corripio Miyar, Yolanda
McNeilly, Tom N.
Cwiklinski, Krystyna
Dalton, John P.
Zafra, Rafael
Pérez, José
Martínez Moreno, Álvaro
Buffoni Perazzo, Leandro
Publisher
SPRINGER NATUREDate
2021-07-02Subject
Hepatic lymph nodes, CD4+ T cells, cytokines, F. hepatica, sheep, ruminantsMETS:
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Show full item recordAbstract
The immunomodulatory capacity of F. hepatica antigens is probably one of the main reasons for the development
of a driven non-protective Th2 immune response. In this study, we analysed the cellular response of hepatic lymph
node cells and CD4+
T cells in terms of proliferative response, efficiency of antigen presentation and cytokine production,
to F. hepatica-derived molecules, at early and late stages of the infection. Thirty-one sheep were allocated into
five groups and were slaughtered at 16 dpi and 23 wpi. In order to analyse antigen-specific response, the following
F. hepatica recombinant molecules were used: rFhCL1, rFhCL2, rFhCL3, rFhCB1, rFhCB2, rFhCB3, rFhStf-1, rFhStf-2,
rFhStf-3 and rFhKT1. A cell proliferation assay using hepatic lymph node cells and an antigen presentation cell assay
using CD4+
T cells were performed. At 16 dpi, all molecules but rFhStf-2 and rFhKT1 elicited a significant cell proliferative
response on hepatic lymph node cells of infected animals. At both early and late stage of the infection, antigen
presentation of rFhCB3 and rFhCL2 resulted in higher stimulation index of CD4+
T cells which was IL-2 mediated,
although no statistically significant when compared to uninfected animals. Significant cytokine production (IL-4,
IL-10 and IFN-γ) was conditioned by the antigen-specific cell stimulation. No CD4+
T cell exhaustion was detected
in infected sheep at the chronic stage of the infection. This study addressed antigen-specific response to F. hepaticaderived
molecules that are involved in key aspects of the parasite survival within the host.