Worthington M, Conliffe M A, Baron S
J Infect Dis. 1980 Aug;142(2):163-74. doi: 10.1093/infdis/142.2.163.
The role of cellular immunity, humoral antibody, and interferon in recovery from primary systemic infection in mice due to herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) was studied. Immunosuppression by three methods--each of which was sufficient to suppress humoral and cellular immunity--markedly potentiated primary systemic HSV-1 infection. Immunosuppressed mice did not form neutralizing antibody to HSV-1, but passive transfer of physiologic amounts of neutralizing antibody as late as day 6 after infection exerted a protective effect. Passive transfer of 10(8) immune spleen cells on day 3 after infection was only partially protective and did not thereafter reverse the effect of X-irradiation on HSV-1 infection. Furthermore, mice that received immune cells appeared to make sufficient antibody to explain the protective effect of the transferred cells. These results suggest that antibody to HSV-1 has a critical role in promoting recovery from primary infection in this model. The findings neither favor nor exclude a defensive role for immune cells in this experimental primary HSV-1 infection.
研究了细胞免疫、体液抗体和干扰素在小鼠因1型单纯疱疹病毒(HSV-1)引起的原发性全身感染恢复过程中的作用。通过三种方法进行免疫抑制——每种方法都足以抑制体液免疫和细胞免疫——显著增强了原发性全身HSV-1感染。免疫抑制的小鼠未形成针对HSV-1的中和抗体,但在感染后第6天晚期被动转移生理量的中和抗体发挥了保护作用。感染后第3天被动转移10⁸个免疫脾细胞仅具有部分保护作用,且此后并未逆转X射线照射对HSV-1感染的影响。此外,接受免疫细胞的小鼠似乎产生了足够的抗体来解释转移细胞的保护作用。这些结果表明,针对HSV-1的抗体在该模型中促进原发性感染恢复方面具有关键作用。这些发现既不支持也不排除免疫细胞在这种实验性原发性HSV-1感染中的防御作用。