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J. Virol., Mar 1995, 1400-1407, Vol 69, No. 3
BA Blacklaws, P Bird, D Allen, DJ Roy, IC MacLennan, J Hopkins, DR Sargan and I McConnell
Reactive changes occurring within lymph nodes draining the subcutaneous
site of acute infection with maedi-visna virus (MVV) were studied, and the
appearance of infected cells correlated with the immune response. Cells
infected with virus were detected in the node by cocultivation from day 4
postinfection (p.i.), with maximum numbers being seen between days 7 and
14, but even then infected cells were rare, with a maximum frequency of 23
50% tissue culture infective doses (TCID50) in 10(6) lymph node cells. At
later times, infected cells were still detected, but their numbers fell to
1 to 2 TCID50 per 10(6) cells. Virus-specific CD8+ cytotoxic T-cell
precursors (CTLp) were isolated from infected nodes from day 10 p.i.
onwards, and T-cell proliferative responses to MVV were first detected on
day 7 and consistently detected after day 18. Histological analysis showed
a vigorous immune response in the node. There was a marked blast reaction
in the T-cell-rich zones, which was greatest at the time when the number of
virally infected cells was at its height. At this stage, large numbers of
plasma cells were seen in the medullary cords, indicating that extensive
T-cell-dependent B-cell activation was occurring in the T- cell-rich zones.
Germinal centers were prominent shortly after the onset of the T-zone
response and were still present at 40 days p.i. Phenotype studies of
isolated lymph node cells failed to detect major changes in the proportion
or phenotype of macrophages, CD1+ interdigitating cells, and CD4+ or CD8+ T
cells despite the fact that CD8+ lymphoblasts form a major population
leaving the node in efferent lymph. This suggests that there is a balanced
increase in the number of all cell types in response to the virus within
the node and selective migration of CD8+ lymphoblasts containing
virus-specific CTLp from the node. Virus-specific immune responses are
therefore present within the node when infectious virus isolation is
maximal, but cellular immunity may act to control the level of infection
from day 18 onwards.
Copyright © 1995, American Society for Microbiology
Initial lentivirus-host interactions within lymph nodes: a study of maedi-visna virus infection in sheep
Department of Veterinary Pathology, University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom.
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