Effects of virally expressed interleukin-10 on vaccinia virus infection in mice

Autor: Kurilla, M G, Swaminathan, S, Welsh, R M, Kieff, E, Brutkiewicz, R R
Zdroj: The Journal of Virology; December 1993, Vol. 67 Issue: 12 p7623-7628, 6p
Abstrakt: To investigate the in vivo role of interleukin-10 (IL-10) in viral infection, we compared infections with a recombinant vaccinia virus (VV) expressing IL-10 (VV-IL10) under control of the VV P7.5 promoter and a control virus (VV-beta gal) in normal and severe combined immunodeficient mice. In normal mice, VV-IL10 infection resulted in less natural killer cell activity at 3 days postinfection and less VV-specific cytotoxic T-cell activity at 6 or 7 days postinfection than VV-beta gal infection. However, the use of dermal scarification or intraperitoneal, intranasal, or intracerebral inoculation into immunocompetent mice resulted in no difference between VV-IL10 and VV-beta gal in visible lesions, mortality, protective immunity to a 100-fold lethal VV challenge, or VV-specific antibody response. In the immunodeficient mice, VV-IL10 infection resulted in greater natural killer cell activity and lower virus replication than VV-beta gal infection. These in vivo effects were subtler and more complex than had been anticipated. From the VV-IL10 murine model, the Epstein-Barr virus-encoded homolog of human IL-10, BCRF1, may provide a selective advantage by blunting the early human natural killer cell and cytotoxic T-cell responses so that Epstein-Barr virus can establish a well-contained latent infection in B lymphocytes.
Databáze: Supplemental Index