Gold L H, Brot M D, Polis I, Schroeder R, Tishon A, de la Torre J C, Oldstone M B, Koob G F
Department of Neuropharmacology, Scripps Research Institute, La Jolla, California 92037.
Behav Neural Biol. 1994 Sep;62(2):100-9. doi: 10.1016/s0163-1047(05)80031-7.
Lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) is a nonlytic murine virus that provides a valuable model system for studying the behavioral correlates of CNS viral infection. Newborn or immunosuppressed mice infected with LCMV develop a persistent tolerant infection characterized by continuous viral production. Virus can be found in various body organs including lung, liver, kidney, and brain. In brain, neurons are the predominant CNS cells infected and the greatest number of persistently infected neurons are found in the cerebral cortex, hippocampus, other limbic structures and parts of the hypothalamus. Despite continuous infection throughout the animal's life, neurons show no structural injury or dropout. Mice from the DBA/2J strain were infected with LCMV (1000 plaque-forming units) within 18 h of birth and tested for behavioral function as adults. Plaque assays indicated persistent infection in virus-injected mice. Mice were tested for their ability to learn a Y-maze spatial discrimination to avoid the onset of a mild footshock (0.43 mA). The number of correct avoidance responses made during training was taken as a measure of acquisition performance. The virus-infected mice showed a deficit in acquisition of the Y-maze discrimination compared to that seen in vehicle-injected and noninjected controls. Following additional training to reach control levels of performance, the infected mice and the controls were injected with the cholinergic antagonist scopolamine. Scopolamine (2.0 mg/kg) disrupted the performance of the infected mice significantly more than control performance, suggesting that a cholinergic dysfunction accounted for some of the learning deficit. A separate group of virus-infected mice exhibited hypoactivity during the first exposure to a locomotor testing apparatus.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
淋巴细胞性脉络丛脑膜炎病毒(LCMV)是一种非裂解性鼠病毒,为研究中枢神经系统病毒感染的行为相关性提供了一个有价值的模型系统。感染LCMV的新生小鼠或免疫抑制小鼠会发展出一种以持续病毒产生为特征的持续性耐受感染。病毒可在包括肺、肝、肾和脑在内的各种身体器官中发现。在脑中,神经元是被感染的主要中枢神经系统细胞,并且在大脑皮层、海马体、其他边缘结构和下丘脑的部分区域发现了数量最多的持续感染神经元。尽管在动物的整个生命过程中持续感染,但神经元没有显示出结构损伤或缺失。DBA/2J品系的小鼠在出生后18小时内感染LCMV(1000个噬斑形成单位),并在成年后进行行为功能测试。噬斑测定表明病毒注射小鼠存在持续感染。测试小鼠学习Y迷宫空间辨别以避免轻微足部电击(0.43 mA)发作的能力。训练期间做出的正确回避反应数量被用作习得表现的衡量指标。与注射溶剂和未注射的对照组相比,病毒感染小鼠在Y迷宫辨别习得方面存在缺陷。在经过额外训练达到对照组表现水平后,给感染小鼠和对照组注射胆碱能拮抗剂东莨菪碱。东莨菪碱(2.0 mg/kg)对感染小鼠表现的干扰明显大于对照组,这表明胆碱能功能障碍是造成部分学习缺陷的原因。另一组病毒感染小鼠在首次接触运动测试装置时表现出活动减少。(摘要截选至250字)