The effects of Trypanosome factors on Bovine Leukocyte function.

African trypanosomes infect cattle and humans in tsetse fly-infested areas of sub-Saharan Africa, causing sleeping sickness in humans and nagana in livestock. To date, no vaccines are available to combat these economically important diseases. In order to develop safe and protective vaccines, the imm...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Nebane, L.D.
Format: Tesis
Language:Inglés
Published: University of Zimbabwe 1998
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/79705
_version_ 1855528814252130304
author Nebane, L.D.
author_browse Nebane, L.D.
author_facet Nebane, L.D.
author_sort Nebane, L.D.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description African trypanosomes infect cattle and humans in tsetse fly-infested areas of sub-Saharan Africa, causing sleeping sickness in humans and nagana in livestock. To date, no vaccines are available to combat these economically important diseases. In order to develop safe and protective vaccines, the immunomodulatory role of parasite factors on immune function must be identified. The suppression of cellular responses is a characteristic feature of African trypanosomosis. In mice, certain aspects of immunosuppression are mediated by the generation of suppressive T-cells and by nitric oxide (NO) produced by gamma interferon (IFN-y)-activated macrophages. In order to ascertain which parasite factors induce the immunosuppression observed in bovine trypanosomosis, the effect of trypanosome factors on NO production by activated bovine peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) and monocytes as well as proliferative responses of stimulated PBMC, was measured. Cells were tested for their capacity to produce NO in response to activation with IFN-y and trypanosome factors and also for their proliferative capacity after stimulation with mitogens, trypanosome antigens and non-trypanosome antigens. Total mononuclear cell populations and adherent cells derived from uninfected N'Dama cattle and activated in vitro with IFN-y and trypanosome antigens, produced NO. Trypanosome antigens induced very low levels of NO production by both monocytes and PBMC. IFN-y acted synergistically with trypanosome antigens to induce higher levels of NO production. Both trypanosome and non-trypanosome antigens significantly decreased or almost completely blocked the proliferation of bovine PBMC to the recall antigen, foot and mouth disease vaccine (FMDV) antigen, but not to concanavalin A (Con A). These results suggest that immunosuppression observed in trypanosome-infected N'Dama cattle might be induced by specific trypanosome factors. However, these observations require further investigation.
format Tesis
id CGSpace79705
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 1998
publishDateRange 1998
publishDateSort 1998
publisher University of Zimbabwe
publisherStr University of Zimbabwe
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace797052023-02-15T11:16:25Z The effects of Trypanosome factors on Bovine Leukocyte function. Nebane, L.D. infection cattle diseases African trypanosomes infect cattle and humans in tsetse fly-infested areas of sub-Saharan Africa, causing sleeping sickness in humans and nagana in livestock. To date, no vaccines are available to combat these economically important diseases. In order to develop safe and protective vaccines, the immunomodulatory role of parasite factors on immune function must be identified. The suppression of cellular responses is a characteristic feature of African trypanosomosis. In mice, certain aspects of immunosuppression are mediated by the generation of suppressive T-cells and by nitric oxide (NO) produced by gamma interferon (IFN-y)-activated macrophages. In order to ascertain which parasite factors induce the immunosuppression observed in bovine trypanosomosis, the effect of trypanosome factors on NO production by activated bovine peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) and monocytes as well as proliferative responses of stimulated PBMC, was measured. Cells were tested for their capacity to produce NO in response to activation with IFN-y and trypanosome factors and also for their proliferative capacity after stimulation with mitogens, trypanosome antigens and non-trypanosome antigens. Total mononuclear cell populations and adherent cells derived from uninfected N'Dama cattle and activated in vitro with IFN-y and trypanosome antigens, produced NO. Trypanosome antigens induced very low levels of NO production by both monocytes and PBMC. IFN-y acted synergistically with trypanosome antigens to induce higher levels of NO production. Both trypanosome and non-trypanosome antigens significantly decreased or almost completely blocked the proliferation of bovine PBMC to the recall antigen, foot and mouth disease vaccine (FMDV) antigen, but not to concanavalin A (Con A). These results suggest that immunosuppression observed in trypanosome-infected N'Dama cattle might be induced by specific trypanosome factors. However, these observations require further investigation. 1998 2017-02-03T11:04:44Z 2017-02-03T11:04:44Z Thesis https://hdl.handle.net/10568/79705 en Limited Access University of Zimbabwe Nebane, L. D. 1998. The effects of Trypanosome factors on Bovine Leukocyte function. MSc thesis in Biotechnology. University of Zimbabwe.
spellingShingle infection
cattle
diseases
Nebane, L.D.
The effects of Trypanosome factors on Bovine Leukocyte function.
title The effects of Trypanosome factors on Bovine Leukocyte function.
title_full The effects of Trypanosome factors on Bovine Leukocyte function.
title_fullStr The effects of Trypanosome factors on Bovine Leukocyte function.
title_full_unstemmed The effects of Trypanosome factors on Bovine Leukocyte function.
title_short The effects of Trypanosome factors on Bovine Leukocyte function.
title_sort effects of trypanosome factors on bovine leukocyte function
topic infection
cattle
diseases
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/79705
work_keys_str_mv AT nebaneld theeffectsoftrypanosomefactorsonbovineleukocytefunction
AT nebaneld effectsoftrypanosomefactorsonbovineleukocytefunction