Borrow P, Evans C F, Oldstone M B
Department of Neuropharmacology, Scripps Research Institute, La Jolla, California 92037.
J Virol. 1995 Feb;69(2):1059-70. doi: 10.1128/JVI.69.2.1059-1070.1995.
Despite the clinical importance of virus-induced immunosuppression, how virus infection may lead to a generalized suppression of the host immune response is poorly understood. To elucidate the principles involved, we analyzed the mechanism by which a lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) variant produces a generalized immune suppression in its natural host, the mouse. Whereas adult mice inoculated intravenously with LCMV Armstrong rapidly clear the infection and remain immunocompetent, inoculation with the Armstrong-derived LCMV variant clone 13, which differs from its parent virus at only two amino acid positions, by contrast results in persistent infection and a generalized deficit in responsiveness to subsequent immune challenge. Here we show that the immune suppression induced by LCMV clone 13 is associated with a CD8-dependent loss of interdigitating dendritic cells from periarteriolar lymphoid sheaths in the spleen and, functionally, with a deficit in the ability of splenocytes from infected mice to stimulate the proliferation of naive T cells in a primary mixed lymphocyte reaction. Dendritic cells are not depleted in immunocompetent Armstrong-infected mice. LCMV Armstrong and clone 13 exhibit differences in their tropism within the spleen, with clone 13 causing a higher level of infection of antigen-presenting cells in the white pulp, including periarterial interdigitating dendritic cells, than Armstrong, thereby rendering these cells targets for destruction by the antiviral CD8+ cytotoxic T-lymphocyte response which is induced at early times following infection with either virus. Our findings illustrate the key role that virus tropism may play in determining pathogenicity and, further, document a mechanism for virus-induced immunosuppression which may contribute to the clinically important immune suppression associated with many virus infections, including human immunodeficiency virus type 1.
尽管病毒诱导的免疫抑制具有临床重要性,但病毒感染如何导致宿主免疫反应的全面抑制却知之甚少。为了阐明其中的原理,我们分析了淋巴细胞性脉络丛脑膜炎病毒(LCMV)变体在其天然宿主小鼠中产生全面免疫抑制的机制。成年小鼠静脉接种LCMV阿姆斯特朗株后能迅速清除感染并保持免疫能力,而接种仅在两个氨基酸位置与其亲本病毒不同的源自阿姆斯特朗株的LCMV变体克隆13,则会导致持续感染以及对后续免疫挑战的反应性全面缺陷。我们在此表明,LCMV克隆13诱导的免疫抑制与脾脏动脉周围淋巴鞘中交错突细胞的CD8依赖性缺失有关,并且在功能上与感染小鼠脾细胞在原发性混合淋巴细胞反应中刺激幼稚T细胞增殖的能力缺陷有关。在具有免疫能力的感染阿姆斯特朗株的小鼠中,树突状细胞不会减少。LCMV阿姆斯特朗株和克隆13在脾脏中的嗜性存在差异,克隆13在白髓中引起的抗原呈递细胞(包括动脉周围交错突细胞)感染水平高于阿姆斯特朗株,从而使这些细胞成为抗病毒CD8 + 细胞毒性T淋巴细胞反应在感染两种病毒后早期诱导产生时的破坏目标。我们的研究结果说明了病毒嗜性在决定致病性方面可能发挥的关键作用,并且进一步证明了一种病毒诱导免疫抑制的机制,这可能有助于解释与包括人类免疫缺陷病毒1型在内的许多病毒感染相关的临床上重要的免疫抑制现象。