๐ Antibody-Mediated Protection against Cytotoxic T-Cell Escape in Coronavirus-Induced Demyelination
C57BL/6 (B6) mice infected with mouse hepatitis virus (MHV) strain JHM develop a clinically evident, demyelinating encephalomyelitis. Infectious virus can be isolated from the spinal cords of these mice and is invariably mutated in the immunodominant CD8 T-cell epitope recognized in this strain. We showed previously that these persistently infected mice did not mount a measurable serum anti-MHV neutralizing antibody response. Here we show that cytotoxic T-lymphocyte (CTL) escape was not detected in MHV-infected BALB/b mice (H-2 b haplotype), even though the same CD8 T-cell epitopes were recognized as in B6 mice. BALB/b mice had 25-fold more MHV-specific antibody-secreting cells in the central nervous system, the site of infection, than B6 mice, suggesting that local production of anti-MHV antibody contributed to this absence of CTL escape. Additionally, administration of anti-MHV neutralizing antibody to infected B6 mice suppressed the development of CTL escape mutants. These findings indicate a key role for the anti-MHV antibody response in suppressing virus replication, thereby minimizing the emergence and competitive advantage of CTL escape mutants.
keywords
๐ nervous system (116)
๐ hepatitis virus (437)
๐ spinal cord (23)
๐ mouse hepatitis (371)
๐ virus replication (219)
๐ central nervous (112)
year
โฐ 2003
journal
๐ Journal of Virology
issn
๐ 0022538X
volume
77
number
22
page
11867-11874
citedbycount
12
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