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CD8+ Cells and Natural Cytotoxic Activity Among Spleen, Blood, and Heart Lymphocytes During the Acute Phase of Trypanosoma Cruzi Infection in Rats

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Journal Infect Immun
Date 1992 Mar 1
PMID 1541517
Citations 6
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Abstract

The infection developed by Wistar Furth rats inoculated with the Y strain of Trypanosoma cruzi was the experimental model used in our study. The results showed that this infection altered considerably the CD4/CD8 lymphocyte subset ratio and the natural cytotoxic activity of mononuclear cells in the spleen, blood, and myocardial tissue. Concomitantly, an expansion of the number of cells expressing major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II antigens was observed, as well as spontaneous development of high levels of blast cells, mainly in the spleen. The inflammatory infiltration of the myocardium, made up essentially of CD8+ cells (cytotoxic/suppressor T cells, natural killer cells), was initially found at 9 days postinfection, spread continuously, and was observed until the death of the animals at about 18 days postinfection. T. cruzi infection also enhanced the natural killer activity of mononuclear cells in the blood, spleen, and myocardium. Sorting these cells by affinity columns showed that the natural killer function was performed exclusively by the CD8+ population, which did not express MHC class II antigens. It was shown that the polyclonal T-lymphocyte activation induced by T. cruzi infection results in a wide distribution of CD8+ cells with enhanced natural cytotoxic activity in the spleen, blood, and cardiac tissue.

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