The Leishmania major LACK antigen with an immunodominant epitope at amino acids 156 to 173 is not required for early Th2 development in BALB/c mice.

Infect Immun

Departmrnt of Medicine, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of California-San Francisco, UCSF Medical Center, Room C-443, 521 Parnassus Avenue, San Francisco, CA 94143-0654, USA.

Published: December 2004

The Leishmania major LACK antigen contains an immunodominant epitope at amino acids 156 to 173 (LACK(156-173)) that is believed to nucleate the pathological Th2 immune response in susceptible BALB/c mice. To test this hypothesis, we generated L. major parasites that express a mutated LACK that fails to activate Vbeta4/Valpha8 T-cell receptor transgenic T cells specific for this epitope. Although mutant parasites attenuated the expansion of endogenous LACK-specific, interleukin-4 (IL-4)-expressing, CD4 T cells compared to wild-type parasites in vivo, the overall frequency of IL-4 and gamma interferon-secreting lymphocytes was similar to that elicited by wild-type L. major. Mutant parasites demonstrated diminished amastigote viability and delayed lesion development in mice, although parasites could be recovered over 200 days after infection. Complementation with a wild-type lack fusion construct partially rescued these defects, indicating a role for endogenous LACK in parasitism. Mice inoculated with mutant parasites were not protected against subsequent infection with wild-type L. major.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC529165PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/IAI.72.12.6924-6931.2004DOI Listing

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