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Acquired resistance to Schistosoma mansoni infection was measured in S. mansoni-infected or irradiated cercaria-immunized mice, and in normal mice to which the former had been surgically joined. Such parabiotic partners were shown to freely exchange humoral and cellular blood constituents. There was no detectable transfer of resistance from mice infected for 8, 12, or 28 weeks to their uninfected partners, even if parabiosis was established before the initial infection and maintained to autopsy. In comparison with parabiosed controls, the number of adult worms surviving from a challenge infection was reduced by 51-96% in the previously infected mice but was not significantly reduced in their uninfected partners. In contrast, mice immunized with irradiated cercariae and their nonimmunized parabiotic partners showed similar levels of resistance. These data indicate that the resistance induced in mice by irradiated cercariae can be transferred, confirm that at least under some experimental conditions the resistance induced in mice by a previous S. mansoni infection is not readily transferred, and provide additional evidence that the resistance induced by normal infection and irradiated cercarial immunization differ in some fundamental way.
Accepted for publication June 21, 1980.
* This work was supported by the Naval Medical Research and Development Command, Work Unit No. MR041.05.01.0023, and the Office of Naval Research Contract No. N00014.76.C.0146. The opinions or assertions contained herein are the private ones of the authors and are not to be construed as official or reflecting the views of the U.S. Navy Department or the naval service at large. The experiments reported herein were conducted according to the principles set forth in the current edition of the "Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals," Institute of Laboratory Animal Resources, National Research Council.
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