This post discusses the following paper, chosen by a classmate for her presentation in a class that was about the pathogenesis of persistent infections:
Kaewraemruaen C, Sermswan RW, Wongratanacheewin S. CpG
oligodeoxynucleotides with crude parasite antigens reduce worm recovery in
Opisthorchis viverrini infected hamsters. Acta
Trop 2016;164:395-401
Opisthorchis viverrini
is a food-borne liver trematode, found in South east Asia, giving it the common
name - Southeast Asian liver fluke. It has a typical trematode life-cycle (See
CDC's page here). Infection itself can be divided into the acute and chronic
phases, with the acute phase having a typical Th1 type immune response,
characterized by IL12 and IFNg, and the chronic phase having a typical Th2/Treg
response with IL4, IL 10 and TGFbeta. Hamsters are used as models to study the
immunopathology of this infection.
In a recent paper published from Thailand, Kaewraemruaen et
al 1, in trying to answer the
question of the role played by Th1 responses, hypothesize that there might be a
protective role played by Th1 cytokines in the early stages of infection. The
hypothesis is derived from the fact that in the acute phases of infection, Th1
related cytokines are upregulated, and that hamsters vaccinated against O. viverrini have shown a Th1 skewed
response, with low amounts of Treg cytokines IL10 and TGFbeta. In the later
stages of infection, the adult parasite skews the response to a Th2/Treg type,
and persists in the body, causing the chronic infection.
The methodology used was to induce a Th1 response using an
adjuvant that typically induces such a response and determine if the response
caused a reduction in the number of adult trematodes recovered after a time period.
Evidence to prove their hypothesis came from the following
experiments:
a. In vitro
proliferation of, and IFNg production from mononuclear cells from naïve hamster
spleens were higher for the Th1 cytokine inducing adjuvant CpG
Oligodeoxynucleotide than the non-CpG oligodeoxynucleotide control and the
crude somatic antigen, but lower than the assay positive control (stimulation
with PAM and ionomycin) 72 hrs after incubation.
b. Hamsters that had been injected with CpG ODN alone or
with crude somatic antigen or somatic antigen alone, had higher numbers of CD4+
T cells, higher amounts of IFNg and higher numbers of IFNg+ T helpers, than the
negative controls, although the presence or absence of somatic antigen with the
adjuvant had no bearing on the numbers of CD4+ cells.
c. Despite the adjuvant only animals exhibiting robust Th1
responses, number of adult worms recovered from the hamsters was reduced only
when the adjuvant was combined with the crude somatic antigen, and this
reduction was not statistically significant. However, there were fewer adult
worms in animals that received that adjuvant and adjuvant + antigen compared to
PBS injected control animals.
The paper is also significant in that the authors used mAbs
directed against murine IFNg to cross detect IFNg in hamsters (both IFNg
proteins have 56% identity in their primary structures). Also, CpG ODN which
acts through TLR 9 in mice to stimulate innate immune cells was able to act on
TLR 9 of hamsters, which is expected given the idea of conservation of TLRs across
phyla, and the fact that both animals are rodents, and hence closely related.
Thus, the authors sort of show that a Th1 response is
protective, as it apparently is in Schistosoma
mansoni infections. However, we get into the semantics of what
"protection" actually means. My expectation at the beginning of my reading
was that the authors meant protection against reinfection, since the Th1 clearly
was an acute phase response. For reasons unclear, the conclusion is that a Th1 response causes protection in the acute phase of the disease, with "protection"being defined as a reduction in the number of adult parasites. However from a disease perspective, no histopathology was done to show that the insult to the liver was any different
because of the response. Also, it was not shown in any way that the increase in
IFNg+ T helpers were specific to the trematodes and were not just randomly
activated T helpers found in blood that had little to no impact on the adult
trematodes in the liver. The role of other non- Th1 based responses must have also
been considered, to explain the reduction in adult parasite numbers.
Kaewraemruaen
C, Sermswan RW, Wongratanacheewin S. CpG oligodeoxynucleotides with crude
parasite antigens reduce worm recovery in Opisthorchis viverrini infected
hamsters. Acta Trop 2016;164:395-401.
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