Previous Article | Next Article ![]()
Journal of Virology, May 2003, p. 5749-5758, Vol. 77, No. 10
0022-538X/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JVI.77.10.5749-5758.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Michelle Elliott,2 Alicia Gomez-Yafal,3 Jeffrey D. Lifson,4 Ronald C. Desrosiers,5 Fred Wang,6 Peter Barry,7 Michael Mach,8 and R. Paul Johnson1,9
Divisions of Immunology,1 Pathology,2 Microbiology, New England Primate Research Center, Harvard Medical School, Southborough, Massachusetts 01772,5 Infectious Disease Unit and Partners AIDS Research Center, Massachusetts General Hospital, Charlestown, Massachusetts 02129,9 Therion Biologics, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02142,3 AIDS Vaccine Program, SAIC Frederick, Inc., National Cancer InstituteFrederick, Frederick, Maryland 21702,4 Department of Medicine, Brigham & Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115,6 Center for Comparative Medicine, University of CaliforniaDavis, Davis, California 95616,7 Institut Für Klinische Und Molekulare Virologie, Universitãt Erlangen-Nürnberg, D-91058 Erlangen, Germany8
Received 12 December 2002/ Accepted 21 February 2003
|
|
|---|
|
|
|---|
In humans, the role of host immunity in control of CMV replication and prevention of CMV end-organ disease has been largely studied in immunosuppressed bone marrow or stem cell transplant recipients. These studies have established a central role for CMV-specific CD8+ and CD4+ T lymphocytes in resolution of CMV viremia and recovery from CMV disease (7, 31). Although high titers of neutralizing antibodies (Abs) have been correlated with the absence of plasma CMV DNA and improved survival following CMV disease (26), the relative contributions of CMV-specific Abs and cell-mediated immune responses to protection against CMV reactivation in humans are not known.
The reduced incidence of CMV disease following HAART-induced immune reconstitution and the association between regression of CMV disease and recovery of CMV-specific CD4+ T lymphocytes suggest that pathogen-specific immunity is important for containment of CMV replication in HIV-infected individuals (16). However, the precise immune correlates that protect against CMV reactivation in AIDS have not been characterized. Monitoring the correlates of protective CMV-specific immune responses may serve as an early predictive marker for identifying individuals at high risk for CMV disease prior to the detection of increased CMV viremia. Furthermore, therapeutic strategies that boost protective immune responses to CMV, and thereby limit CMV viremia in AIDS, are also likely to have a beneficial effect on the outcome of HIV infection.
We have used the simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV)-rhesus macaque model to prospectively investigate viral and immunologic risk factors associated with CMV reactivation in AIDS. CMV disease has been reported in up to 30% of rhesus macaques with simian AIDS (4). The similarities between simian and human CMV infection with regard to natural history, immune responses, and disease progression (14, 15, 28) make the rhesus macaque a valuable model for the study of CMV pathogenesis in AIDS. A significant advantage over human studies is the relative ease of conducting prospective studies and the ability to longitudinally evaluate changes in CMV-specific immune responses before and after pathogenic lentiviral infection. In the present study, we have investigated the temporal relationship between suppression of CMV-specific cellular and humoral immunity and occurrence of CMV end-organ disease in a cohort of CMV-seropositive rhesus macaques monitored from the time of SIV inoculation until the onset of AIDS.
|
|
|---|
Eleven CMV-seropositive juvenile macaques were inoculated with 27 ng of the p27 equivalent of pathogenic SIVmac251 intravenously and monitored longitudinally. Elective euthanasia was performed by standard criteria after the onset of end-stage AIDS. Blood was collected once a week for the first 4 weeks after SIV inoculation and thereafter at biweekly to bimonthly intervals until time of death.
Vaccinia virus recombinants. Plasmids containing molecularly cloned fragments of the rhesus CMV (rhCMV) strain 68-1 genome were used as templates for amplification of immediate-early protein 1 (IE1) exon 4, IE2 exon 5 (3), and the phosphoprotein pp65 (E. L. Blewett, R. H. Kravitz and P. Barry, unpublished observations). Amplification of the rhCMV interleukin-10 (IL-10) coding region used a plasmid containing a cDNA copy of IL-10 as the template (18). Amplicons were cloned into the TOPO-TA cloning vector (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, Calif.) and sequenced to confirm fidelity of amplification. The open reading frames were subcloned into the vaccinia virus recombination vector pAbT 4587 (Therion Biologic Corporation, Cambridge, Mass.) by using appropriate restriction sites, and the insertion sites of the recombinant plasmids were sequenced to confirm fidelity of cloning.
In each recombinant vaccinia virus, cDNAs encoding the rhCMV proteins IE1, IE2, pp65, and IL-10 were put under the control of the vaccinia virus early/late 40K promoter (9). The foreign genes were inserted into the HindIII M region of the genome of the NYCBH strain of vaccinia virus. Recombinant vaccinia viruses containing IE1, IE2, pp65, or IL-10, and designated rV-rhCMVIE1, rV-rhCMVIE2, rV-rhCMVpp65, and rV-rhCMVIL-10, respectively, were selected and purified by using a host-range selection system as previously described (19).
Immunophenotyping. Fluorochrome-conjugated antihuman monoclonal Abs (MAbs) used for flow cytometry included CD4 allophycocyanin (clone SK3; BD Biosciences, San Diego, Calif.), CD3 phycoerythrin or fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC; clone SP34; BD Biosciences), and CD8 peridinin chlorophyll protein (clone SK1; BD Biosciences). Flow samples were run on a FACSCalibur fluorescence-activated cell sorter (FACS) (BD Biosciences) and analyzed with Cellquest software.
Measurement of CMV-specific CD4+ T lymphocytes.
Peripheral blood CMV-specific CD4+ T lymphocytes were quantitated by gamma interferon (IFN-
) enzyme-linked immunospot (ELISPOT) assays with whole rhCMV antigen for stimulation as previously described (15). Spots were counted with a KS ELISPOT automated reader system (Carl Zeiss, Inc., Thornwood, N.Y.) using KS ELISPOT 4.2 software (performed by Zellnet, New York, N.Y.) and expressed as the number of spot-forming cells (SFC) per million CD4+ T lymphocytes.
Measurement of CMV-specific CD8+ T lymphocytes.
Peripheral blood CMV-specific CD8+ T lymphocytes responding to rhCMV proteins were quantitated by the IFN-
ELISPOT assay with vaccinia virus recombinants for in vitro stimulation. By intracellular cytokine staining, we have shown that stimulation with vaccinia virus recombinants leads to cytokine secretion by CD3+ CD8+ T lymphocytes but not by CD4+ T lymphocytes (A. Kaur, unpublished data). Peripheral blood mononuclear cell (PBMC) aliquots were adsorbed for 90 min at 37°C with rV-rhCMVIE1, rV-rhCMVIE2, rV-rhCMVpp65, rV-rhCMVIL-10, or the control vaccinia virus NYCBH strain at a multiplicity of infection of 3 PFU per cell. Infected cells were washed and placed overnight in IFN-
-coated ELISPOT wells. The frequency of CMV-specific CD8+ T lymphocytes was expressed as the sum of specific responses to individual rhCMV IE1, IE2, pp65 and IL-10 proteins and reported as the number of SFC per million PBMCs.
Neutralizing Abs to rhCMV. Serial serum dilutions were incubated with gradient-purified rhCMV strain 68-1 for 4 h at 37°C. Viral titers were adjusted to give 100 to 150 infected cell counts at a magnification of x200 magnification on a fluorescence microscope (Olympus/IMT-2), this being equivalent to 2,000 infected cells out of 15,000 cells. Fibroblasts (1.5 x 104) were added to the serum-virus mix and plated on microtiter plates. rhCMV-infected cells were counted 16 h later by indirect immunofluorescence with a rabbit serum directed against the IE protein of rhCMV (3). The percent neutralization was calculated as the reciprocal of infectivity, with maximum infectivity being determined by incubation of virus without serum. The rhCMV neutralizing Ab titer conferring 50% neutralization was reported.
Binding antibodies to rhCMV, rhesus LCV, and RRV. Abs binding to whole rhCMV antigen, whole rhesus rhadinovirus (RRV) antigen, and a synthetic peptide derived from the rhesus lymphocryptovirus (LCV) small viral capsid antigen rhBFRF3 were detected by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) as previously described (6, 15, 23). All binding Ab titers were determined by end-point dilution titration. Negative cutoff values were set at three standard deviations above the mean absorbance value obtained either with negative control serum tested at the lowest dilution or from triplicate wells that contained secondary Ab but no sera.
Plasma CMV DNA. Plasma CMV DNA was quantitated by real-time PCR as previously described (15). CMV DNA was quantitated with a plasmid standard containing the entire rhCMV IE gene. This assay detects rhCMV with a linear dynamic range from 100 to 106 copies in the presence of genomic DNA.
Plasma SIV RNA. Blood samples were collected in tubes containing EDTA, which were spun at 1,200 x g for 10 min within 3 h of drawing blood and stored at -80°C for quantitation of SIV RNA. SIV RNA was quantitated with a real-time reverse transcription (RT)-PCR assay as previously described (17).
Diagnosis of CMV disease. All SIV-infected macaques were monitored up to the natural onset of AIDS. At death, all animals underwent necropsy and a comprehensive evaluation of multiple tissues. CMV end-organ disease was diagnosed by histopathologic examination of tissues. In all instances, the diagnostic histologic triad of cytomegalic cells, amphophilic intranuclear inclusion bodies, and neutrophilic infiltrate was confirmed to be of CMV origin by immunohistochemistry with a polyclonal rabbit Ab to the rhCMV IE1 protein (3).
Statistical analysis. Statistical analysis was carried out with Statview (Abacus Concepts, Inc., Berkeley, Calif.). P values for differences between groups were determined by the Mann-Whitney U test and for differences between time points by the Wilcoxon signed rank test. The relationship between two continuous variables was analyzed by the Spearman rank correlation test. The relationship between two nominal variables was compared with the Fisher exact probability test.
|
|
|---|
|
View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 1. Characteristics of the cohort of SIV-infected chesus macaques with and without CMV disease
|
At the time of death, the median plasma SIV RNA level in macaques with CMV disease (6.4 x 108 copies per ml) was 2 logs higher than that in macaques without CMV disease (median, 1.2 x 106 copies per ml) (Fig. 1a). The difference in plasma SIV RNA levels between the two groups of macaques was apparent as early as 8 weeks postinfection (P < 0.05, Mann-Whitney U test). Furthermore, a significant increase in plasma SIV load with time was observed in the macaques with CMV disease, but not in the macaques without CMV disease (Fig. 1b).
![]() View larger version (40K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 1. Plasma SIV and CMV load and CD4+ T-lymphocyte counts in SIV-infected rhesus macaques with or without CMV disease. (a) Box plots comparing levels of plasma SIV RNA, plasma CMV DNA, and CD4+ T-lymphocyte counts at the time of death in six SIV-infected rhesus macaques with CMV disease (YES) and five SIV-infected rhesus macaques without CMV disease (NO). Horizontal bars show median values, boxes indicate 75% confidence intervals, and error bars show 95% confidence intervals. P values were determined by the nonparametric Mann-Whitney U test. (b) Correlation between time post-SIV infection and plasma SIV RNA, CMV DNA, and CD4+ T-lymphocyte counts. (c) Correlation between CMV load and SIV load or CD4+ T lymphocytes. Correlation coefficient (Rho) and P values were determined by the Spearman rank correlation coefficient test.
|
Contrary to the observed association between severe CD4+ T lymphocytopenia and increased risk of occurrence of CMV disease in HIV-infected humans, six of six SIV-infected macaques with CMV disease had CD4 counts of >200/µl at the time of death. Paradoxically, the peripheral CD4+ T-lymphocyte counts were significantly lower in the macaques that did not develop CMV disease (Fig. 1a), and a significant decline in peripheral CD4+ T-lymphocyte counts during the course of SIV infection was observed only in this group of macaques (Fig. 1b). Surprisingly, the difference in CD4+ T-lymphocyte counts between macaques with and without CMV disease was also apparent as early as 8 weeks post-SIV infection (P < 0.05, Mann-Whitney U test). Consistent with these data, the increase in CMV load was directly correlated with an increase in SIV load (P < 0.01), but not with a decrease in CD4+ T-lymphocyte counts (Fig. 1c).
CMV disease in rhesus macaques with AIDS is associated with a sustained decline in both the humoral and cellular components of CMV-specific immunity. At the time of death, macaques with CMV disease had significantly lower titers of anti-rhCMV binding Abs compared to the macaques without CMV disease (Fig. 2a and Table 2). There was a wide range in the magnitude of CMV-specific immune parameters pre- and post-SIV infection (Table 2). Macaques that progressed to CMV disease did not have lower levels of measurable CMV-specific immune responses pre-SIV infection (Table 2). Rather, baseline frequencies of CMV-specific CD8+ T lymphocytes were significantly higher in macaques with CMV disease (Table 2).
![]() View larger version (59K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 2. Magnitude and kinetics of decline of CMV-specific humoral and cellular immunity in SIV-infected rhesus macaques with or without CMV disease. (a) Box plots comparing CMV-specific binding and neutralizing Ab titers and the frequency of CMV-specific CD4+ and CD8+ T cells at the time of death in SIV-infected rhesus macaques with and without CMV disease. P values were determined by the nonparametric Mann-Whitney U test. Binding Ab titers were determined by end-point dilution. Neutralizing Ab titers refer to the reciprocal dilution inducing 50% neutralization. (b) Extent of decline in CMV-specific immune parameters during the course of SIV infection in individual animals. P values were determined by the nonparametric Wilcoxon signed rank test. (c) Changes in the level of CMV-specific immune parameters with time during the course of SIV infection. Rho and P values were determined by the Spearman rank correlation coefficient test.
|
|
View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 2. Comparison of CMV-specific immune responses in SIV-infected rhesus macaques with and without CMV disease
|
Although CMV-specific CD4+ and CD8+ T lymphocytes had declined in the majority of SIV-infected rhesus macaques, regardless of the occurrence of CMV disease (Fig. 2b and Table 3), the mean decline in CMV-specific CD8+ T lymphocytes was >50-fold higher in the macaques with CMV disease than in the macaques without CMV disease (P < 0.05, Mann-Whitney U test). In contrast to the fairly ubiquitous decline in CMV-specific T lymphocytes in SIV-infected macaques, a twofold or greater decline in anti-CMV binding and neutralizing Abs was detected in five of six macaques with CMV disease but in only one of five macaques without CMV disease (P = 0.08, Fisher exact test; Table 3).
|
View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 3. Comparison of declines in CMV-specific immune responses at the time of death in SIV-infected rhesus macaques with and without CMV disease
|
![]() View larger version (43K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 3. Relationship between CMV load and CMV-specific humoral and cellular immune responses in SIV-infected rhesus macaques. (a) Relationship between decline in CMV-specific immune parameters and detection of <1,000 or >1,000 copies of detectable CMV DNA per ml of plasma. A cutoff value of 50% decline is demarcated on each plot. n denotes the number of time points for which a CMV-specific immune parameter measurement was available. The Fisher exact probability test was used for comparison of differences in frequency of decline between the two groups. (b) Relationship between plasma CMV DNA and the frequency of CMV-specific T lymphocytes or titers of anti-CMV Ab. (c) Relationship between CMV-specific CD4+ T lymphocytes and CMV-specific CD8+ T lymphocytes or anti-CMV neutralizing Ab. Rho and P values were determined by the Spearman rank correlation coefficient test.
|
|
View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 4. Relationship between decline in CMV-specific immunity and CMV viremia
|
Analysis of all animals revealed that plasma CMV viral load was inversely correlated with the frequency of CMV-specific CD4+ and CD8+ T lymphocytes (Fig. 3b). A weak inverse correlation between plasma CMV load and neutralizing Ab was observed in the macaques with CMV disease (Rho, -0.362; P = 0.02; Spearman rank correlation test). However, this correlation was not observed when all the animals were analyzed together (Fig. 3b) and is consistent with the preponderance of time points with low-level CMV viremia. The frequencies of CMV-specific CD4+ and CD8+ T lymphocytes were tightly correlated with each other irrespective of the presence or absence of CMV disease (Fig. 3c) (data not shown). On the other hand, a modest direct correlation between anti-CMV neutralizing Ab titers and the frequency of CMV-specific CD4+ T lymphocytes was only observed in the macaques with CMV disease (Fig. 3c). Although titers of anti-CMV neutralizing and binding Abs were directly linked with each other (Rho, +0.608; P < 0.0001; Spearman rank correlation test), we did not observe a correlation between the frequency of CMV-specific CD4+ T lymphocytes and anti-CMV binding Ab (data not shown).
Selective decline in anti-CMV Ab in rhesus macaques with CMV disease. Since the majority of rhesus macaques with a significant decline in anti-CMV Abs were rapid progressors, we investigated whether this reflected a selective or global decline in memory humoral responses. In individual animals, we compared the decline in anti-CMV binding Ab titers to the decline in binding Ab titers to RRV and LCV, two herpesvirus infections that are widely prevalent among rhesus macaques (6, 20). At the time of death, contrary to anti-CMV Ab, anti-LCV and anti-RRV Ab were not present at lower levels in the macaques with CMV disease compared to the macaques without CMV disease (Fig. 4a). Although a decline in anti-LCV and anti-RRV Abs was seen in the majority of SIV-infected rhesus macaques tested, there was no difference in the extent of Ab decline between macaques with and without CMV disease (Fig. 4b). Finally, there was no correlation between the decline in anti-CMV and anti-LCV Abs (Fig. 4c). Thus, a macaque with a 16-fold decline in anti-CMV Ab had a fourfold decline in anti-LCV Ab, and a macaque with an eightfold decline in anti-CMV Ab had no decline in anti-LCV Ab (Fig. 4c). Although there was a trend towards a positive correlation between the decline in anti-CMV Ab and anti-RRV Ab, it did not reach statistical significance (Fig. 4c). Together, these data suggest that the decline in humoral immunity in macaques with CMV disease was virus specific.
![]() View larger version (36K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 4. Comparison of decline in anti-CMV, anti-LCV, and anti-RRV Abs in SIV-infected rhesus macaques with and without CMV disease. Anti-LCV Abs were measured in four macaques with CMV disease and two macaques without CMV disease. Anti-RRV Abs were measured in all study animals. Two macaques were RRV seronegative prior to SIV infection and were excluded from analysis. (a) Ab titers at time of death in macaques with (Yes) and without (No) CMV disease. P values were determined by Mann-Whitney U test. (b) Fold decline from pre-SIV infection values in anti-CMV, anti-LCV, and anti-RRV Abs in macaques with (Yes) and without (No) CMV disease. P values were determined by Mann-Whitney U test. (c) Relationship between decline in anti-CMV Ab and either anti-LCV Ab or anti-RRV Ab. Rho and P values were determined by the Spearman rank correlation coefficient test.
|
|
|
|---|
Rather than absolute levels, we observed that the magnitude and rate of decline of CMV-specific Abs and CMV-specific CD4+ and CD8+ T lymphocytes clearly differentiated macaques that progressed to CMV disease from macaques that did not develop CMV disease. Increases in plasma CMV DNA associated with a 50% or greater decline in the frequency of CMV-specific CD4+ and CD8+ T lymphocytes were readily detected in SIV-infected macaques with or without CMV disease. However, levels above 1,000 copies per ml, seen only in four of six macaques with CMV disease, were detected when anti-CMV Ab had also declined to 50% or less of baseline values. In instances in which CMV disease manifested in the presence of a relatively intact CMV-specific humoral immune response (two of six macaques), plasma CMV DNA levels did not exceed 1,000 copies per ml, and histologic evidence of CMV disease was focal, suggesting a role for anti-CMV Ab in limiting viral dissemination. Previous studies on correlation between CMV disease and host immunity in humans and macaques with AIDS have been restricted to the analysis of a single component of CMV-specific immunity (1, 14-16, 27, 28). The contributions of different components of CMV-specific immunity in control of CMV replication have been elegantly studied in the murine CMV model. In one such study, CMV recurrence in B-cell-deficient mice did not occur with depletion of a single lymphocyte subset (22). Instead, depletion of CD8+ T cells in combination with NK and/or CD4+ T cells resulted in CMV recurrence at most tissue sites (22). Although an absence of virus-specific Abs in itself is not sufficient to induce CMV reactivation in murine CMV infection, the magnitude of recurrent viremia following T-cell suppression is 100- to 1,000-fold higher in B-cell-deficient as compared to normal mice (11). The correlation between decline in anti-CMV Ab and occurrence of disseminated CMV disease in our study is consistent with these findings.
In pathogenic lentiviral infection, loss of T helper cell function may be the primary factor leading to loss of virus-specific CD8+ T lymphocytes and T-dependent Ab production (10, 12). A strong positive correlation between the frequencies of CMV-specific CD4+ and CD8+ T lymphocytes was observed prior to SIV infection and persisted during the course of SIV infection in macaques with and without CMV disease, suggesting that the fates of these two cell populations were tightly linked. CMV-specific CD4+ T lymphocytes were also positively correlated with anti-CMV neutralizing Abs. However, this correlation was modest and only apparent in the SIV-infected macaques that developed CMV disease. It is not known to what extent the long-term maintenance of anti-CMV neutralizing Abs is dependent on long-lived plasma cells (29) or on memory B lymphocytes that continually differentiate into short-lived Ab-secreting plasma cells (21). Since loss of CD4 T-cell help has been shown to significantly reduce memory neutralizing antibodies by inhibiting differentiation of memory B cells (21), it is likely that a similar mechanism may be operating in SIV-infected macaques and HIV-infected humans.
A variety of B-cell abnormalities, including loss of memory B lymphocytes, have been reported in HIV-infected individuals (5). If the decline in anti-CMV Ab in SIV-infected macaques was due to a global loss of memory B cells, one would expect to observe a decline in other virus-specific Abs. This did not appear to be the case, as evidenced by the discordant decline in titers of Ab to CMV when compared with those to two other persistent herpesviruses. The relatively selective decline in anti-CMV Ab could also have resulted from binding of Ab to excess circulating virus and in itself does not imply a causal association with CMV disease. The observation of a relatively intact CMV humoral immune response in animals with no or focal CMV disease in our study and the occurrence of fulminant CMV infection in SIV-infected macaques with a poor primary CMV Ab response (28) suggest that Abs do have a role in immune control of CMV replication.
Similar to HIV-infected humans, high SIV and CMV viral loads were significant risk factors for development of CMV end-organ disease in SIV-infected rhesus macaques. However, in contrast to HIV infection, CD4+ T lymphocytopenia was not a prerequisite for occurrence of CMV end-organ disease. Neither did it appear to enhance the risk of developing CMV disease. In fact, CD4+ T-lymphocyte counts below 200/µl were only seen in two animals in this cohort, neither of which developed CMV end-organ disease. Since the majority of rhesus macaques with CMV disease progressed very rapidly to AIDS, it is possible that the absence of CD4+ T lymphocytopenia is a reflection of the short disease duration, rather than a species-specific difference. Since both rapid and normal progressors have been observed among SIV-infected macaques with histologic CMV disease (4), we cannot exclude the possibility of CMV disease in chronically SIV-infected macaques being more akin to CMV disease in HIV-infected humans.
Rapid disease progression is a common feature of primary CMV infection in SIV-infected macaques (28). In this study, all animals had acquired CMV infection naturally and were CMV seropositive for at least 2 years prior to SIV infection. The animals were individually housed from 3 weeks prior to SIV infection until the end of the study and hence were unlikely to have gotten superinfected with other strains of rhCMV following SIV infection. Whether the rapid disease progression was a cause or effect of CMV disease cannot be determined from this study.
In conclusion, our data provide evidence for a complex interaction between both humoral and cellular CMV-specific immune responses in preventing CMV reactivation in AIDS. Although the importance of CD4+ T-cell help in maintaining an effective antiviral CD8+ T-lymphocyte response is well established, our study also demonstrates a significant association between impaired CD4+ T-cell help and induction of memory B-cell dysfunction. Rather than absolute differences in the level of CMV-specific immune responses, both the magnitude and kinetics of decline in CMV-specific immune responses appeared to predispose SIV-infected macaques to development of CMV disease. A decline in a single immune parameter was not sufficient to induce CMV disease. In this cohort, a fourfold or greater decline in the frequency of CMV-specific CD4+ and CD8+ T lymphocytes combined with a twofold or greater decline in anti-CMV binding and neutralizing Abs was a harbinger of disseminated CMV disease.
We gratefully acknowledge Barbara Kropff for the neutralization assays, Hannah Sanford for the RRV ELISA, Carol Quink for the LCV ELISA, Marie-Claire Gauduin for the SIVmac251 virus stock, Angela Carville and the staff of the Department of Primate Medicine for superb assistance with the animal experiments, and Martin Hirsch for critical review of the manuscript.
Present address: Charles River Laboratories, Wilmington, MA 01887. ![]()
|
|
|---|
This article has been cited by other articles:
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Copyright © 2009 by the American Society for Microbiology. For an alternate route to Journals.ASM.org, visit: http://intl-journals.asm.org | More Info»