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Genetic association of murine susceptibility to Brugia malayi microfilaraemia

40

Citations

26

References

1983

Year

Abstract

The influence of host genetics on susceptibility of mice to Brugia malayi microfilariae and its possible mechanism were studied. There was a strain-association for duration and peak level of microfilaraemia: CBA/CaJ, C3H/HeJ, DBA/1J, AuSs/J and A.S.w/Sn had a short duration (3-5 days) and low parasitemia (19-26 parasites/100 microliters blood) compared to C57Br/cdJ, AKR/J, C57BL/6J, 129/J, BALB/cJ, DBA/2J, B10.D2/NSn, B10.D2/OSn and SJL/J (duration of 58-73 days, peak parasitaemia of 58-74 parasites/100 microliters blood). Relative resistance to microfilariae was not related to the H-2 complex as determined in studies of congenic C3H.B10 (H-2b) and B10.H-2k mice and their background strains. This trait was inherited in a dominant fashion and involved a single or small number of genes. Serum anti-microfilarial antibodies reached highest levels in strains with a long duration compared to those with a short duration of parasitaemia (geometric mean titres of 1:13450 vs 1:284). The distribution of 51Cr-labelled microfilariae among the livers, spleens, lungs and kidneys of a resistant (CBA/CaJ) and a susceptible (C57BL/6J) strain was similar. Transfer of immune lymphoid cells or sera between histocompatible (H-2k) resistant CBA/CaJ mice and susceptible C57Br/cdJ animals did not alter the duration of microfilaraemia.

References

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