The regulation of immunological responses to parasitic infections and the development of tolerance

Abstract
It is well established that specific unresponsiveness to immunization can be induced by prolonged exposure to antigenic proteins. More generally, many parasitic infections, such as the helminth worms and the Leishmania parasites, appear to be able to persist in some of their human hosts over long periods of time, via what appears to be an ability to induce defective or inappropriate T-cell responses (= tolerance). Recent research has suggested that cytokines, produced by specific subsets of CD4+ T-cells (characterized by cytokine secretory profiles and growth properties), have an important, and often complex, role in promoting or inhibiting host protective immunity to parasitic infections. By examination of the population dynamics of the stimulation and regulation of cellular responses to infection, via the use of simple mathematical models, we show that nonlinear interactions between CD4+ T-cell subsets and their secreted cytokines can result in either host protection or immunological unresponsiveness, depending on the magnitude and duration of exposure to parasitic infection. Analyses also identify a possible mechanism to explain the stimulation of two separate peaks of enhanced T-cell-mediated responses over a wide range of levels of antigenic exposure.