Immune Responses of Specific-Pathogen-Free Mice to Chronic Helicobacter pylori (Strain SS1) Infection

AUTOR(ES)
FONTE

American Society for Microbiology

RESUMO

A model permitting the establishment of persistent Helicobacter pylori infection in mice was recently described. To evaluate murine immune responses to H. pylori infection, specific-pathogen-free Swiss mice (n = 50) were intragastrically inoculated with 1.2 × 107 CFU of a mouse-adapted H. pylori isolate (strain SS1). Control animals (n = 10) received sterile broth medium alone. Animals were sacrificed at various times, from 3 days to 16 weeks postinoculation (p.i.). Quantitative culture of gastric tissue samples from inoculated mice demonstrated bacterial loads of 4.0 × 104 to 8 × 106 CFU per g of tissue in the animals. Infected mice had H. pylori-specific immunoglobulin M (IgM) and IgG antibodies in serum (at day 3 p.i.) and IgG and IgA antibodies in their gastric contents (weeks 4 and 16 p.i.) and saliva (week 16 p.i.). Mucosal IgM antibodies were not detected. Histological examination of the gastric mucosae from control and infected mice revealed mild chronic gastritis, characterized by the presence of polymorphoneutrophil cell infiltrates and submucosal lymphoid aggregates, in infected animals at 16 weeks p.i. Differences in the quantities of IgG1 and IgG2a subclass antibodies detected in the sera of mouse strains (Swiss, BALB/c, and C57BL/6) infected by H. pylori suggested that host factors influence the immune responses induced against this bacterium in the host. In conclusion, immune responses to H. pylori infection in mice, like those in chronically infected humans, appear to be ineffective in resolving the infection.

Documentos Relacionados