Compton Susan R, Ball-Goodrich Lisa J, Zeiss Caroline J, Johnson Linda K, Johnson Elizabeth A, Macy James D
Section of Comparative Medicine, Yale University School of Medicine, PO Box 208016, New Haven, Connecticut 06520-8016, USA.
Comp Med. 2003 Apr;53(2):197-206.
Gamma interferon-deficient (IFN-gamma KO) mice developed a wasting syndrome and were found to be co-infected with Helicobacter sp., and a new isolate of mouse hepatitis virus (MHV) designated MHV-G. The disease was characterized by pleuritis, peritonitis, hepatitis, pneumonia, and meningitis. Initial experiments used a cecal homogenate inoculum from the clinical cases that contained H. hepaticus and MHV-G to reproduce the development of peritonitis and pleuritis in IFN-gamma KO mice. In contrast, immunocompetent mice given the same inoculum developed an acute, self-limiting infection and remained clinically normal. This result confirmed the importance of IFN-gamma in preventing chronic infection and limiting viral dissemination. To understand the role of both agents in the development of peritonitis and pleuritis, IFN-gamma KO mice were infected with either agent or were co-infected with H. hepaticus and MHV-G. Infection with MHV-G induced a multisystemic infection similar to that described in the original cases, with multifocal hepatic necrosis, acute necrotizing and inflammatory lesions of the gastrointestinal tract, and acute peritonitis and pleuritis with adhesions on the serosal surfaces of the viscera. However, mice given H. hepaticus alone had minimal pathologic changes even though the organism was consistently detected in the cecum or feces. Although co-infection with H. hepaticus and MHV-G induced lesions similar to those associated with MHV-G alone, the pathogenesis of the MHV infection was modified. Helicobacter hepaticus appeared to reduce the severity of MHV-induced lesions during the acute phase of infection, and exacerbated hepatitis and meningitis at the later time point. We conclude that infection of IFN-gamma KO mice with MHV-G results in multisystemic infection with peritonitis, pleuritis, and adhesions due to the aberrant immune response in these mice. In addition, co-infection of these mice with H. hepaticus results in alterations in the pathogenesis of MHV-G infection.
γ干扰素缺陷(IFN-γ基因敲除)小鼠出现消瘦综合征,且被发现同时感染了幽门螺杆菌属细菌和一种新分离出的小鼠肝炎病毒(MHV),命名为MHV-G。该疾病的特征为胸膜炎、腹膜炎、肝炎、肺炎和脑膜炎。最初的实验使用来自临床病例的盲肠匀浆接种物,其中含有肝螺杆菌和MHV-G,以在IFN-γ基因敲除小鼠中重现腹膜炎和胸膜炎的发展过程。相比之下,给予相同接种物的免疫健全小鼠发生急性、自限性感染,且临床症状保持正常。这一结果证实了IFN-γ在预防慢性感染和限制病毒传播中的重要性。为了解这两种病原体在腹膜炎和胸膜炎发展过程中的作用,将IFN-γ基因敲除小鼠分别感染其中一种病原体,或同时感染肝螺杆菌和MHV-G。感染MHV-G引发了类似于原始病例中描述的多系统感染,伴有多灶性肝坏死、胃肠道急性坏死性和炎性病变,以及急性腹膜炎和胸膜炎,内脏浆膜表面有粘连。然而,仅给予肝螺杆菌的小鼠即使在盲肠或粪便中持续检测到该病原体,其病理变化也很小。尽管同时感染肝螺杆菌和MHV-G引发的病变与单独感染MHV-G时相似,但MHV感染的发病机制发生了改变。肝螺杆菌似乎在感染急性期降低了MHV诱导病变的严重程度,并在后期加重了肝炎和脑膜炎。我们得出结论,IFN-γ基因敲除小鼠感染MHV-G会导致多系统感染,出现腹膜炎、胸膜炎和粘连,这是由于这些小鼠的免疫反应异常所致。此外,这些小鼠同时感染肝螺杆菌会导致MHV-G感染发病机制的改变。