Defining protective responses to pathogens: cytokine profiles in leprosy lesions

M Yamamura, K Uyemura, RJ Deans, K Weinberg… - Science, 1991 - science.org
M Yamamura, K Uyemura, RJ Deans, K Weinberg, TH Rea, BR Bloom, RL Modlin
Science, 1991science.org
The immunological mechanisms required to engender resistance have been defined in few
infectious diseases of man, and the role of specific cytokines is unclear. Leprosy presents
clinically as a spectrum in which resistance correlates with cell-mediated immunity to the
pathogen. To assess in situ cytokine patterns, messenger RNA extracted from leprosy skin
biopsy specimens was amplified by the polymerase chain reaction with 14 cytokine-specific
primers. In lesions of the resistant form of the disease, messenger RNAs coding for …
The immunological mechanisms required to engender resistance have been defined in few infectious diseases of man, and the role of specific cytokines is unclear. Leprosy presents clinically as a spectrum in which resistance correlates with cell-mediated immunity to the pathogen. To assess in situ cytokine patterns, messenger RNA extracted from leprosy skin biopsy specimens was amplified by the polymerase chain reaction with 14 cytokine-specific primers. In lesions of the resistant form of the disease, messenger RNAs coding for interleukin-2 and interferon-gamma were most evident. In contrast, messenger RNAs for interleukin-4, interleukin-5, and interleukin-10 predominated in the multibacillary form. Thus, resistance and susceptibility were correlated with distinct patterns of cytokine production.
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