Effect of Friend leukemia virus infection on susceptibility to Candida albicans
Autor: | Kenneth J. Blank, K K Klyczek, S M Jones, T J Rogers, H R Buckley, Marlena A. Moors |
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Rok vydání: | 1990 |
Předmět: |
Time Factors
Neutrophils Ratón Immunology In Vitro Techniques Kidney Virus Replication Microbiology Virus Mice In vivo Murine leukemia virus Animals Candida albicans Mice Inbred BALB C Leukemia Experimental biology Candidiasis biology.organism_classification In vitro Corpus albicans Friend murine leukemia virus Infectious Diseases Viral replication Parasitology Research Article |
Zdroj: | Infection and Immunity. 58:1796-1801 |
ISSN: | 1098-5522 0019-9567 |
Popis: | Previous studies have demonstrated that Friend leukemia virus (FLV) induces a profound immunosuppression in susceptible mice. The studies described in this report indicate that mice infected with FLV have an increased susceptibility to subsequent infection with the opportunistic pathogen Candida albicans, as measured by increased numbers of C. albicans CFU in the kidneys of FLV-infected mice relative to uninfected controls. Experiments in which the NB-tropic and N-tropic strains of FLV were used suggest that virus replication or the resulting virus burden may be important in the observed increased susceptibility to C. albicans. Since neutrophils are believed to be important in the response of mice to systemic Candida infections, the effect of FLV infection on neutrophil candidacidal activity was investigated. The percentage of neutrophils present in unfractionated Proteose Peptone-elicited peritoneal exudates of mice infected with FLV for 14 days was significantly lower than in uninfected control mice or mice infected with FLV for 6 or 10 days. When neutrophils from FLV-infected and control mice were purified, adjusted to equal concentrations, and tested for in vitro candidacidal activity, neutrophils from mice infected with FLV for 14 days were deficient in their ability to kill C. albicans relative to normal controls and mice infected with FLV for 6 or 10 days. Addition of normal mouse serum increased killing in all groups but did not restore candidacidal activity of neutrophils from mice infected with FLV for 14 days to levels of control neutrophils or neutrophils from mice infected for 6 or 10 days with the virus. These results suggest a defect in neutrophil function, at the later stages of FLV infection, involving in vitro candidacidal activity. In addition, neutrophils from FLV-infected mice may be deficient in in vivo chemotactic activity. These defects in neutrophil function could account, at least in part, for the observed increased susceptibility of FLV-infected mice to C. albicans. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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