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J. Virol., Sep 1996, 6199-6206, Vol 70, No. 9
JA Beatty, BJ Willett, EA Gault and O Jarrett
The evolution of the virus-specific cytotoxic T-lymphocyte response in two
cats experimentally infected with feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV) was
monitored. Effector cells were derived from peripheral blood lymphocytes
during the acute and chronic phases of infection (0 to 21 and 62 to 127
weeks, respectively) and from the spleen and lymph nodes at 127 weeks after
infection. Lymphocytes were restimulated in vitro with
paraformaldehyde-fixed, autologous lymphoblasts which had been infected
with recombinant vaccinia viruses expressing FIV GAG or ENV proteins.
Unstimulated lymphocytes were also used as effectors in some assays.
51Cr-labelled autologous skin fibroblasts infected with recombinant
vaccinia viruses were used as targets. FIV GAG-specific cytotoxic
precursors were detected in restimulated circulating lymphocytes during
acute infection in both cats. The onset of this activity was as early as 2
weeks postinfection (p.i.) in one cat. From 62 weeks p.i. neither FIV GAG-
nor ENV-specific precursors could be detected in the peripheral blood.
However, at 127 weeks p.i., GAG- and ENV-specific cytotoxic precursors were
detected in lymphocytes isolated from lymph nodes. The FIV-specific
cytotoxic cells were predominantly major histocompatibility complex class I
restricted. No cytotoxic activity was detected from unstimulated
lymphocytes. These studies demonstrate the use of an assay system for
dissecting the FIV-specific cytotoxic cell response and show that precursor
cells appear in the circulation very early after infection and prior to a
detectable antibody response. Our results also suggest that the persistent
high- level circulating antiviral cytotoxic T-lymphocyte responses seen in
human immunodeficiency virus-infected humans may not be a feature of FIV
infections in cats.
Copyright © 1996, American Society for Microbiology
A longitudinal study of feline immunodeficiency virus-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes in experimentally infected cats, using antigen- specific induction
Department of Veterinary Pathology, University of Glasgow, Bearsden, United Kingdom.
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