Fultz P N, McClure H M, Swenson R B, McGrath C R, Brodie A, Getchell J P, Jensen F C, Anderson D C, Broderson J R, Francis D P
J Virol. 1986 Apr;58(1):116-24. doi: 10.1128/JVI.58.1.116-124.1986.
The lymphadenopathy-associated virus (LAV) prototype strain of human T-lymphotropic virus type III/LAV was transmitted to juvenile chimpanzees with no prior immunostimulation by (i) intravenous injection of autologous cells infected in vitro, (ii) intravenous injection of cell-free virus, and (iii) transfusion from a previously infected chimpanzee. All five animals that received more than one 50% tissue culture infective dose were persistently infected with LAV or chimpanzee-passaged LAV for up to 18 months. During this time they developed no illnesses, but they exhibited various degrees of inguinal and axillary lymphadenopathy and significant reductions in rates of weight gain. Detailed blood chemistry and hematologic evaluations revealed no consistent abnormalities, with the exception of immunoglobulin G (IgG) hypergammaglobulinemia, which became apparent in one animal 6 months postinfection and continued at more than 1 year postinfection. Transient depressions followed by increases in the numbers of T4 cells to levels greater than normal were observed in all animals after virus inoculation. However, the number of LAV-infected peripheral blood cells decreased with time after infection. Results of enzyme immunoassays showed that all infected animals seroconverted to IgG anti-LAV within 1 month postinfection and that antibody titers remained high throughout the period of observation. In contrast, only three of the five LAV-infected chimpanzees had detectable IgM antibody responses, and these preceded IgG-specific serum antibodies by 1 to 2 weeks. Virus morphologically and serologically identical to LAV was isolated from peripheral blood mononuclear cells of all infected animals at all times tested and from bone marrow cells taken from one animal 8 months after infection. One chimpanzee that was exposed to LAV only by sharing a cage with an infected chimpanzee developed lymphadenopathy and an IgM response to LAV, both of which were transient; however, no persistent IgG antibody response to LAV developed, and no virus was recovered from peripheral blood cells during a year of follow-up. Thus, LAV readily infected chimpanzees following intravenous inoculation and persisted for extended periods despite the presence of high titers of antiviral antibodies. However, the virus was not easily transmitted from infected to uninfected chimpanzees during daily cage contact.
人类嗜T淋巴细胞病毒III型/淋巴结病相关病毒(LAV)原型株通过以下方式传播给未经预先免疫刺激的幼年黑猩猩:(i)静脉注射体外感染的自体细胞;(ii)静脉注射无细胞病毒;(iii)输注先前感染的黑猩猩的血液。接受超过一个50%组织培养感染剂量的所有五只动物持续感染LAV或经黑猩猩传代的LAV长达18个月。在此期间,它们未出现疾病,但表现出不同程度的腹股沟和腋窝淋巴结病,体重增加率显著降低。详细的血液化学和血液学评估未发现一致的异常情况,只有免疫球蛋白G(IgG)高球蛋白血症除外,该情况在一只动物感染后6个月出现,并在感染后1年多持续存在。在病毒接种后,所有动物均观察到T4细胞数量先短暂减少,随后增加至高于正常水平。然而,感染后LAV感染的外周血细胞数量随时间减少。酶免疫分析结果显示,所有感染动物在感染后1个月内血清转化为抗LAV IgG,并且在整个观察期内抗体滴度保持较高。相比之下,五只感染LAV的黑猩猩中只有三只具有可检测到的IgM抗体反应,且这些反应比IgG特异性血清抗体提前1至2周出现。在所有测试时间,从所有感染动物的外周血单核细胞以及一只动物感染8个月后采集的骨髓细胞中均分离出形态和血清学与LAV相同的病毒。一只仅通过与感染黑猩猩同笼接触而接触LAV的黑猩猩出现了淋巴结病和对LAV的IgM反应,两者均为短暂性;然而,未产生对LAV的持续IgG抗体反应,并且在一年的随访期间未从外周血细胞中分离到病毒。因此,静脉接种后LAV很容易感染黑猩猩,并且尽管存在高滴度的抗病毒抗体仍能长期持续存在。然而,在日常同笼接触期间,该病毒不容易从感染的黑猩猩传播给未感染的黑猩猩。