Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0038362 (stomatitis)
8,852 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Recently, we reported preliminary evidence for the induction of tolerance in vivo by cyclosporin A (CSA) during a persistent virus infection in rats. In the present communication, those observations are verified and the findings extended to the functional level of cell-mediated immunity. Mice infected intracerebrally with lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) normally die from a fatal immune-mediated disease after 6-8 days but they do not succumb if treated intraperitoneally with 50 mg/kg/day of CSA. Immunosuppression initiated one day before infection and continued for at least two consecutive weeks resulted in the absence of immunopathologic disease of the brain and in the survival of mice, which were found to be persistently infected virus carriers. In these animals, no cytotoxic T cell activity could be detected. The effect of CSA was not due to a toxic effect on the immune response since immune reactivity was restored as early as 4 days after discontinuation of the drug in control animals. Neither secondary in vitro nor in vivo restimulation resulted in the generation of a cellular antiviral immune response. Cytotoxic T cell reactivity to third-party antigen, however, could be detected, although somewhat delayed. Additionally, spleen cells from CSA-treated mice did not clear the virus from LCMV-infected recipients upon adoptive transfer, whereas spleen cells from LCMV immune mice completely eliminated virus infection in carrier mice. However, mice immunosuppressed with CSA and infected with vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) did not generate a primary immune response but were immunologically fully reactive to challenge infection, providing evidence for the absence of tolerance and the presence of antigen-specific temporal unresponsiveness. Thus, as exemplified by VSV infection in which the virus does not replicate to considerable titers in mice and viral antigens do not persist, the presence of the foreign antigen for prolonged periods of time could be shown to be a conditio sine qua non for CSA-induced tolerance.
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PMID:Induction of antigen-specific tolerance by cyclosporin A. 132 1

Lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) may cause a severe immunosuppression in mice. Its pathogenesis is apparently dependent on LCMV-specific CD8 effector T cells that mediate the destruction of virus-infected cells which are normally essentially involved in immune responses. Evaluation of various LCMV isolates in this study established a general correlation between their tropism for lymphohemopoietic cells and immunosuppression. When immune responses were assessed as the capacity of mice to mount an anti-vaccinia virus cytotoxic T cell response or an IgG response to vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV), after a primary LCMV infection, LCMV-Armstrong, WE, Clone 13 and Docile were increasingly immunosuppressive in a dose-dependent fashion with respect to both extent and duration. Analysis of lymphocyte subpopulations showed variable effects of the various LCMV isolates that did not reveal patterns readily explaining immunosuppression. To evaluate whether LCMV infection affected T and/or B cell functions directly or whether antigen presentation was impaired, adoptive transfer experiments were performed. Untreated or irradiated but uninfected normal recipient mice receiving adoptively transferred T or B cells from LCMV-WE or Docile-infected immunosuppressed donor mice responded within 30%-100% of normal ranges in both assay systems. In contrast, when T or B cells from normal donors were transferred to irradiated or non-irradiated LCMV-immunosuppressed recipients, they failed to mount a significant cytotoxic T cell response against vaccinia virus or an IgG response to VSV. Thus, the T and B cells from LCMV-immunosuppressed mice were able to function within normal ranges; in contrast, histologically and functionally, antigen presentation was severely impaired in LCMV-immunosuppressed mice.
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PMID:Immunosuppression by lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus infection: competent effector T and B cells but impaired antigen presentation. 162 25

The kinetic study of immunosuppression caused by infection of mice with lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus WE (LCMV-WE) was assessed in DBA/2 (H-2d) and C57BL/6 (H-2b) mice. Infection with LCMV caused suppression of the Day 4 IgM response (complete in DBA/2 and incomplete in C57BL/6) and completely suppressed IgG responses on Days 9 and 42 to vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) injected 2-11 days after LCMV. Suppression was partial when VSV was injected 16-28 days after LCMV-WE infection. The observed suppression between Day 2 and Day 11 was complete and nonspecific as revealed by the fact that these mice could not mount a secondary response to VSV when reinjected with the same VSV 42 days later. Nonspecificity of suppression was further indicated by the finding that the kinetics of recovery from suppression of the anti-VSV response were comparable for the VSV serotype used during the 2- to 11-day period after LCMV infection as for the serologically noncross-reactive second VSV serotype; both anti-VSV responses had recovered by Days 56-82 after LCMV infection. Once an anti-VSV antibody response was established, a subsequent LCMV-WE infection had no suppressive effect on Day 2 or Day 42 after a primary VSV infection. Also, the capacity of VSV-primed mice that were LCMV infected to respond to VSV in a secondary challenge infection with the same VSV was not impaired.
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PMID:Immunosuppression in mice by lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus infection: time dependence during primary and absence of effects on secondary antibody responses. 217 31

The role of different T cell subsets in antiviral host defense was investigated by treating thymectomized C57BL/6 and CBA/J mice with monoclonal rat anti-Lyt-2 or anti-L3/T4 IgG 2b antibodies 14 and 10 days before infection. This treatment depleted the respective T cell subsets to undetectable levels in peripheral blood when assayed by immunofluorescence. In mice treated with anti-Lyt-2, induction of cytotoxic T cells was reduced to less than 1 to 2% after intravenous infection with Armstrong strain of lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV). In addition, no primary swelling of the footpad could be detected following local inoculation of the virus. In animals treated with anti-L3/T4, antiviral cytotoxic T lymphocyte responses were reduced by a factor of 10. These L3/T4+ cell-depleted mice showed delayed footpad swelling after local injection of LCMV Armstrong. After intracerebral infection with LCMV, anti-Lyt-2-treated mice were resistant and those injected with anti-L3/T4 were totally susceptible to LCMV Armstrong-triggered immunopathologic disease. Virus could be detected in the blood of antibody-treated mice 7 days after inoculation; however, no virus could be measured in the blood of surviving anti-Lyt-2-treated animals 15 days after intracerebral infection. Serum titers of interferon-alpha,beta induced by viral infection remained unaffected by depletion of T cell subsets. Anti-L3/T4 antibody-treated C57BL/6 mice failed to generate IgG antibodies against the New Jersey strain of vesicular stomatitis virus, whereas Lyt-2+ cell-depleted mice had normal antivesicular stomatitis virus (New Jersey strain) IgG antibody titers.
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PMID:Functional analysis of T lymphocyte subsets in antiviral host defense. 243 94

A murine model of virally induced acquired immunodeficiency was analyzed in mice. The effect of systemic infection with various isolates of lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) on the capacity of mice to mount a T cell-independent IgM and a T cell-dependent IgG neutralizing antibody response against a subsequent infection with vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) was analyzed. DBA/2 mice infected with the LCMV-WE isolate were impaired in their IgM and IgG responses to VSV. Immune suppression was not caused by interferons inhibiting proper VSV antigen expression, since responses to inactivated VSV were also suppressed. The higher the dose of the LCMV and the lower the dose of the challenging VSV infection the more drastic was the apparent lack of immune responsiveness and the longer it lasted. Kinetics of induction of suppression of the T cell-independent IgM responses closely followed that of a normal cytotoxic T cell response to LCMV-WE, starting on day 6 and reaching maximal levels by day 8 to 10. The T cell-dependent IgG response to VSV was suppressed with a kinetics that was shifted by about 6 days when compared with suppression of IgM responses, i.e. LCMV infection on the same day or before (but not after) VSV infection led to suppression of IgG responses that are usually first detected by day 6-7 after initiation of the VSV infection. Severity and duration of immunosuppressiveness depended upon the LCMV isolate and the mouse strain used: LCMV-WE and LCMV-Docile were most, whereas LCMV-Armstrong was in general least immunosuppressive. Antibody responses to VSV-NJ seemed to be more subject to LCMV-induced immune suppression than VSV-IND-specific responses. Mouse strains differed considerably with respect to extent of suppression, dependent upon both major histocompatibility genes (MHC) and non-MHC genes. DBA and Swiss type mice were generally more susceptible than C57BL and CBA mice, and H-2q and H-2k seemed to be more susceptible than H-2b or H-2d mice. Mice infected with LCMV-WE showed signs of acquired immunodeficiency diseases since they were more susceptible to superinfection with VSV and developed paralytic disease and tended to die from VSV infection. Since LCMV is basically a noncytopathic virus, this murine model of virally induced immune suppression may serve to analyze immune pathogenesis of virus-induced acquired immunodeficiency.
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PMID:An acquired immune suppression in mice caused by infection with lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus. 245 42

Mixed irradiation bone marrow chimeras were prepared by reconstituting lethally irradiated C57BL/10 (B10) or B10.D2 mice with T cell-depleted bone marrow cells of B10 plus B10.D2 origin. These chimeras were healthy and survived well under conventional housing conditions and after experimental laboratory infections. Of a total of 17 chimeras tested, 2 died spontaneously or from the injected virus. Twelve of fifteen chimeras mounted a measurable cytotoxic T cell response to virus. Despite approximately equal percentages of B10 and B10.D2 lymphocytes in chimeras, cytotoxic T cell responses to vaccinia virus and lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus were mediated variably by either syngeneic or allogeneic donor lymphocytes; thus the H-2 type of effector T cells frequently did not correspond to the 50:50 distribution of spleen or peripheral blood lymphocytes. Cytotoxic responses were restricted exclusively to recipient H-2 type. All mixed chimeras examined were able to mount a good IgG response to vesicular stomatitis virus. These results confirm previous data suggesting that such mixed chimeras are healthy and immunocompetent and demonstrate strict recipient-determined restriction specificity of effector T cells; they also suggest that if T help is necessary for induction of virus-specific cytotoxic T cells, it does not require host-restricted interactions between helper T cells and precursor cytotoxic T cells.
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PMID:Antiviral T cell competence and restriction specificity of mixed allogeneic (P1 + P2----P1) irradiation chimeras. 247 May 18

The role of gamma interferon (IFN-gamma) induced during a viral infection in the ability of the host to acquire antiviral immunity was studied in mice. They were injected subcutaneously daily with an ammonium sulfate-precipitated sheep anti-IFN-gamma antibody preparation able to neutralize 10(4) U of IFN-gamma. Specificity of the anti-IFN-gamma antiserum was demonstrated by absence of detectable activity against natural IFN-alpha and -beta. Controls were treated with a similarly prepared normal sheep serum. Treatment with the IFN-gamma-specific antibody preparation had no influence on the ability of mice to generate anti-vaccinia virus- or anti-vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV)-specific cytotoxic T-cell (CTL) responses or T helper-dependent immunoglobulin G responses to VSV. In contrast, treatment of mice with sheep anti-IFN-gamma impaired CTL responses against lymphocytic choriomeningitis (LCM) virus (LCMV, Aggressive isolate); in addition, under the experimental conditions used, it prevented lethal LCM. Cytotoxic T-cell activity measured in the spleens of anti-IFN-gamma-treated mice was comparable to that found in mice initially infected with a 100-fold-larger dose of LCMV. Evaluation of the effects of treatment on the kinetics of virus replication revealed that in both euthymic and athymic nude C57BL/6 mice, anti-IFN-gamma treatment led to an increase of virus titers up to 100-fold compared with control mice. Therefore, IFN-gamma may play a role in controlling viruses with tropism for lymphocytes and monocytes/macrophages, such as LCMV.
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PMID:Enhanced virus replication and inhibition of lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus disease in anti-gamma interferon-treated mice. 254 91

Interleukin 6 (IL6) was found to be produced in the central nervous system (CNS) of ICR+/+ mice infected with lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) or with vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV). When infecting athymic ICR nu/nu mice which cannot develop T cell-mediated meningitis after LCMV infection, no significant synthesis of IL6 was detected in the CNS. IL6 was found, however, to be produced intrathecally in ICR nu/nu mice infected with VSV, which causes a T cell-independent acute encephalitis. This suggested that IL6 may also originate from cells not belonging to the T cell compartment. Indeed, in vitro assays showed that both virus-infected microglial cells and astrocytes secreted IL6. In astrocytes, the infection resulted in the induction of the 1.3-kb messenger RNA IL6. Besides its effect on the development of B cell immunity in the brain, IL6 may be involved in repair mechanisms initiated in the course of viral-induced tissue damage. As shown here, IL6 induced an increase of the secretion of a neurotrophic factor, nerve growth factor by astrocytes. Thus, the intrathecal synthesis of IL6 may be part of the host response to infection favoring immune-mediated elimination of the infectious agent as well as trophic support for neurons.
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PMID:On the cellular source and function of interleukin 6 produced in the central nervous system in viral diseases. 254 84

Contribution of IL-2R-bearing activated lymphocytes to antiviral host defense was investigated in C57BL/6 mice by treatment in vivo with IL-2R-specific mAb PC61. When treated on days 0 and 1 with respect to infection with either vaccinia virus, lymphocytic choriomeningitis (LCM) virus (LCMV) or vesicular stomatitis virus, 6-day immune mice had low numbers of CD8+ T cells that were reduced to about 10% of the values found for infected but otherwise untreated controls. In contrast, the number of CD4+ T cells was within normal ranges. Correspondingly, induction of strictly T help-dependent antiviral neutralizing IgG antibody titers remained unaffected by the mAb treatment, whereas generation of antiviral cytotoxic T cell activity was abrogated. Anti-IL-2R treatment of thymectomized mice 14 and 15 days after infection prevented generation of secondary antiviral cytotoxic T cells in restimulation cultures in vitro initiated 24 days later. Treatment with IL-2R-specific mAb was comparable to treatment with CD8-specific mAb in preventing mice to eliminate virus. Because of the involvement of antiviral cytotoxic T cells in disease manifestations, treatment with IL-2R-specific mAb protected mice from lethal LCM after intracerebral infection with LCMV and inhibited the footpad swelling reaction caused by local infection with the same virus.
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PMID:Effects of treatment with IL-2 receptor specific monoclonal antibody in mice. Inhibition of cytotoxic T cell responses but not of T help. 210 17

Derivatives of beta-lactam antibiotics of the cephalosporin type at 0.02-1 mM concentrations interfered with in vitro replication of two DNA-containing viruses, herpes simplex I and vaccinia, but showed no effects on two RNA-viruses, lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus and vesicular stomatitis virus, or on cell viability. The exact structure of the active compounds remains unknown, but opening of the beta-lactam ring appears to be a prerequisite for their formation. Whereas cephalosporin derivatives were most active, no active products were obtained from penicillins and monobactams. The potential of these unexpected antiviral effects of widely used beta-lactam antibiotics remains subject of further study.
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PMID:Inhibition of HSV-1 and vaccinia virus replication by cephalosporin derivatives. 285 20


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