Abstract
Mycobacterium bovis (BCG), when maintained in vitro, readily incorporates [3H]uracil, the RNA precursor. The rate of [3H]uracil incorporation into bacilli is sharply reduced when the BCG is phagocytized by murine adherent resident peritoneal macrophages and subsequently released by the lysis of monolayers. Macrophages derived from mouse strains that are innately resistant to BCG infection in vivo (Bcgr) are able to inhibit the [3H]uracil incorporation into the bacilli in a significantly more effective way than macrophages from BCG-susceptible (Bcgs) strains. This difference is best demonstrated with a low rate of infection (BCG: macrophage ratio between 1:1 and 2:1), and is most pronounced at 4 to 5 days after in vitro infection of macrophage monolayers. In vivo interaction of BCG with peritoneal macrophages in situ results in the same pattern of enhanced inhibition of [3H]uracil incorporation by Bcgr macrophages. The use of Bcg-congenic mouse strains has confirmed that the Chromosome 1 Bcg (Ity, Lsh) locus is regulating the antimycobacterial activity of macrophages. We conclude that the resident macrophage is the cell population that expresses the phenotype of genetically determined resistance to BCG infection.
- Copyright © 1984 by American Association of Immunologists
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