While the mechanisms that control T  retortaeformis and G  strigo

While the mechanisms that control T. retortaeformis and G. strigosum abundance remain obscure, our findings support the hypothesis of a Th2-mediated antibody and eosinophil clearance of primary infections to the former species but not the latter nematode (47–50). Our recent modelling of the immune response network to T. retortaeformis, based on this study, was consistent

with a Th2-mediated antibody/eosinophil clearance and an IL-4 anti-inflammatory Selleck INCB024360 protection against this nematode (Takar et al., in preparation). However, additional experiments are necessary to confirm these conclusions. In this respect, the evidence that IL-4 can induce Foxp3-expressing Treg and the potential for parasite tolerance (51) raises the question of whether the persistence of G. strigosum in the presence of high IL-4 mucosa expression

involves some tolerance mechanisms activated by the rabbit or whether this is an intrinsic property of the stomach to avoid immuno-pathology. Closely related helminth CH5424802 infections of other herbivores such as sheep and cattle have highlighted the less effective immune response to the abomasal parasites Teladorsagia circumcincta, Haemonchus contortus, Ostertagia ostertagi and Haemonchus placei, compared to the more efficient response against the intestinal nematodes Trichostrongylus colubriformis, Trichostrongylus vitrinus and Cooperia spp. Our study is consistent with these general findings, specifically stomach and small intestine Thalidomide are distinct environments with different immune properties (52) and colonized by helminths with contrasting life history traits (53,54). Based on these systems, helminths in the stomach/abomasal, such as G. strigosum,

tend to have larger body size, slower development and higher fecundity. They also appear to stimulate an immune response either that is slow to develop or has higher tolerance to infections, or can be more easily immuno-suppressed by the helminth. Helminths in the small intestine, e.g. T. retortaeformis, have the opposite of these life history features, probably as a response to a more effective immune response. The co-evolution of the host immune system and the helminth life history traits in the stomach and small intestine appear to have followed different strategies. Nevertheless, in our rabbit–nematode system, the outcome has been equally successful as these parasites cause persistent chronic infections. In conclusion, we have shown that T. retortaeformis and G. strigosum exhibited different immuno-parasitological characteristics during primary infections of naïve rabbits. These nematodes appear to elicit an unequivocal Th-2-biased immune response.

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