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The dynamics of the host–parasite relationship
VI. Regeneration of the immune response in sheep infected with Haemonchus contortus
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 April 2009
Extract
A group of thirty-nine Merino-Border Leicester cross-bred lambs were given six sensitizing doses each of 3000 infective Haemonchus contortus larvae. Previous studies showed that this treatment produced a state of immunological exhaustion (Dineen & Wagland, 1966a). In the present study the regeneration of the immunological response was followed by challenging the sensitized animals and previously uninfected control animals with 3000 infective larvae at 2, 4, 8 and 16 weeks after termination of the sensitizing infections with an anthelmintic. Faecal egg counts were carried out on infected animals twice weekly throughout the course of the experiment, and differential worm counts were performed on groups of animals slaughtered 48 days after challenge.
The results show that maximum regeneration of the immune response occurred when periods of 4 and 8 weeks were permitted to elapse between removal of the sensitizing infections and challenge. At 16 weeks the response of the sensitized animals to challenge infection was not significantly different from that of the control animals.
In contrast to results recorded in the previous communication, a high mortality (49%) occurred among the sheep during sensitization. In the earlier experiment the sensitizing infections were given at fortnightly intervals whereas they were given at weekly intervals in the present experiment.
Interpretation of the study is based upon the threshold behaviour of immunological responsiveness in parasite immunity, the occurrence of an immunological latent period and the relationship of this period to the developmental rate of the parasite, the susceptibility of the 4th larval stage to immunological attack, and the immunological privilege of the adult worm. These phenomena have been described in previous communications in the present series.
We are greatly indebted to Mr Emil Teleki and Misses Helen Giller and Lindy Stothart for their excellent technical assistance.
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- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1967
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