Effect of recombinant human macrophage colony-stimulating factor 1 on immunopathology of experimental brucellosis in mice

AG Doyle, WJ Halliday, CJ Barnett, TL Dunn… - Infection and …, 1992 - Am Soc Microbiol
AG Doyle, WJ Halliday, CJ Barnett, TL Dunn, DA Hume
Infection and immunity, 1992Am Soc Microbiol
Brucella abortus injected into CBA mice replicated primarily in the spleen and liver, reaching
a peak bacterial count in both organs about 7 days postinfection. The organism was
eliminated from the liver but declined to a chronic phase in the spleen. The infection caused
hepatosplenomegaly. An influx of macrophages into the two organs was monitored by
quantitative Northern (RNA blot) analysis of the macrophage-specific marker lysozyme
mRNA. Lysozyme mRNA was detectable in spleen and increased three-to fourfold during …
Brucella abortus injected into CBA mice replicated primarily in the spleen and liver, reaching a peak bacterial count in both organs about 7 days postinfection. The organism was eliminated from the liver but declined to a chronic phase in the spleen. The infection caused hepatosplenomegaly. An influx of macrophages into the two organs was monitored by quantitative Northern (RNA blot) analysis of the macrophage-specific marker lysozyme mRNA. Lysozyme mRNA was detectable in spleen and increased three- to fourfold during infection. In liver, lysozyme mRNA was initially undetectable, but at about the peak of infection it reached a level comparable to that in the spleen. Macrophage colony-stimulating factor 1 (CSF-1) has been reported to be elevated in the circulation of animals infected with B. abortus and is known to stimulate monocytopoiesis. To investigate the role of CSF-1 in pathogenesis, we studied the effect of further increasing the CSF-1 concentration by administration of recombinant human CSF-1. Since the infection is characterized by several distinct phases, recombinant human CSF-1 was administered at defined times relative to these phases. Pronounced effects were observed only when CSF-1 administration was begun during the developing acute phase. The consequences were decreased bacterial numbers in the spleen but an increase in the liver, reduced antibody generation, and increased hepatosplenomegaly. A feature of many chronic intracellular infections is immunosuppression. B. abortus caused a substantial diminution of responsiveness of spleen cells to T-cell mitogens, particularly concanavalin A. This action was mimicked by CSF-1 treatment of the animals prior to spleen cell isolation. The results suggest that CSF-1 plays a role in macrophage recruitment in brucellosis and that recruited macrophages contribute to the immunopathology and immunosuppression.
American Society for Microbiology