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Journal of Virology, February 2003, p. 2247-2250, Vol. 77, No. 3
0022-538X/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JVI.77.3.2247-2250.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
CD154 Blockade Results in Transient Reduction in Theiler's Murine Encephalomyelitis Virus-Induced Demyelinating Disease
Laurence M. Howard,1,2 Katherine L. Neville,1,2 Lia M. Haynes,1,2 Mauro C. Dal Canto,2,3 and Stephen D. Miller1,2*
Departments of Microbiology-Immunology,1
and Pathology,3
and Interdepartmental Immunobiology Center, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University, Chicago, Illinois 606112
Received 8 July 2002/
Accepted 7 November 2002

ABSTRACT
Transient CD154 blockade at the onset of Theiler's murine encephalomyelitis
virus-induced demyelinating disease ameliorated disease progression
for 80 days, reduced immune cell infiltration, and transiently
increased viral loads in the central nervous system. Peripheral
antiviral and autoimmune T-cell responses were normal, and disease
severity returned to control levels by day 120.

TEXT
Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a T-cell-mediated autoimmune demyelinating
disease of the central nervous system (CNS) (
32). While much
is known of the disease pathology of MS, very little is clear
about its etiology (
26). Epidemiological studies provide strong
evidence for an environmental trigger, most likely viral (
4,
16,
26). CNS pathology may result from bystander damage mediated
by T cells targeting a virus that persists in the CNS and subsequent
epitope spreading resulting from the release of sequestered
myelin antigens secondary to virus-specific T-cell-initiated
myelin damage (
20,
21).
Theiler's murine encephalomyelitis virus-induced demyelinating disease (TMEV-IDD) is a virally induced MS model in which chronic TMEV infection of the CNS in susceptible strains of mice leads to a chronic-progressive form of paralytic disease (25, 26, 30). Inflammation is initiated by recruitment of CD4+ T cells and macrophages in response to persistent low-level viral infection in the CNS (13-15, 22).
The CD154-CD40 ligand pair interaction (31) has been demonstrated in active CNS lesions of patients with multiple sclerosis (5). Members of our group and others have demonstrated that CD154 blockade is an effective long-term way to treat both the induction of and ongoing relapsing-remitting experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) (5, 7-9, 11). Previous studies of virally induced disease have demonstrated expression of CD40 in the CNS of TMEV-IDD mice (27) and that therapeutic blockade of CD154 can ameliorate clinical disease in the short term (3). In this paper, we address the long-term effects and mechanisms of CD154 blockade in TMEV-IDD.
CD154 blockade results in a transient amelioration of clinical TMEV-IDD and reduced immune cell infiltration into the CNS.
Mice, inoculated with TMEV in the right cerebral hemisphere as previously described (17, 18), were monitored for clinical disease for approximately 140 days. Starting at the time of clinical disease onset (day 21), mice were given five treatments every other day with 200 ìg of control hamster immunoglobulin G (IgG) or blocking anti-CD154 antibody (Ab) (MR1) (9). Anti-CD154-treated mice demonstrated a significantly reduced severity of clinical disease immediately upon treatment with anti-CD154 Ab, compared to control Ab-treated mice. This amelioration continued until at least 70 days postinfection (Fig. 1, left panel). At all time points this reduction was statistically significant (P < 0.05), and it was most apparent by day 50 postinfection. Anti-CD154-treated mice over this period demonstrated an approximately 35 to 40% reduction in the severity of clinical disease, although the incidence of disease was 100% in both groups. Some mice were monitored for an additional 60 to 70 days (Fig. 1, right panel). By 125 days postinfection, the mean clinical disease severity for anti-CD154-treated mice was no longer significantly different from that of control-treated mice (Fig. 1, right panel).
Spinal cord sections were taken from mice 75 days postinfection,
and histopathologic scores were determined as previously described
(
9). Sections taken from anti-CD154-treated mice at this time
point, where clinical disease was reduced, demonstrated significantly
less inflammatory cell infiltration than that for control Ab-treated
animals and very little demyelination (Fig.
2 and Table
1).
This supports the argument that reduction in disease is due
to inhibition of T-cell effector function within the CNS or
modulation of Th1 cell differentiation in the periphery with
similar downstream effects (
1,
6,
8,
10,
11,
24).
Peripheral virus- and myelin-antigen-specific Th1 responses in vivo are not affected by anti-CD154 treatment.
To determine whether CD154 blockade affected T-cell differentiation
in the periphery or whether this reduced infiltration in the
CNS could be ascribed to effector function within the CNS alone,
delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) responses were evaluated,
as a measure of in vivo peripheral Th1-cell differentiation
and effector function, 45 days after treatment (day 74 postinfection),
to ensure clearance of the MR1 Ab. DTH responses to both viral
antigen, VP2
70-86 peptide (WTTSQEAFSHIRIPLPH), and immunodominant
myelin antigens, PLP
139-151 (HSLGKWLGHPDKF) and MBP
84-104 (VHFFKNIVTPRTPSQGKG),
were determined as previously described (
9).
Anti-CD154 Ab results in reduced DTH to immunizing antigens, provided treatment is given at the time of immunization (8, 9, 11). DTH responses to VP270-86 were comparable between control- and anti-CD154-treated mice (Fig. 3), reflecting the lack of effect of delayed Ab treatment (day 21 postinfection) on antiviral responses. Curiously, CD154 blockade did not affect development of DTH responses to the myelin autoantigen PLP139-151 or MBP84-104 (Fig. 3). This indicates that although the response to myelin antigens cannot be detected by DTH until over 50 days postinoculation (22), epitope spreading has probably already begun by day 21 when CNS damage begins.
Diminished clinical severity in TMEV-IDD is associated with a transient increased viral load in the CNS.
The data clearly demonstrate that while clinical disease severity
(Fig.
1) and histopathology scores (Fig.
2 and Table
1) were
significantly reduced in anti-CD154 versus control Ab-treated
mice, Th1 activation (Fig.
3) is not affected in the long term
by transient CD154 blockade at the onset of disease. This suggests
that perhaps Th1 effector function, but not the continued development
of peripheral Th1 responses, is blocked within the CNS, similar
to what we have previously reported in the EAE model (
10). Since
the TMEV-IDD model is dependent on persistent infection of macrophages
infiltrating into the CNS (
12,
19,
29), we determined the effect
of anti-CD154 treatment on viral activity in the CNS using a
viral plaque assay (
23). Anti-CD154 treatment suppressed antiviral
effector immune responses in the CNS as illustrated by the finding
that at 75 days postinfection, a time point where inflammation,
demyelination, and clinical disease were suppressed by anti-CD154
treatment, the viral load present in both the brains (40-fold
increased) and spinal cords (12-fold increased) of treated mice
was markedly higher than that of controls (Fig.
4a). However,
at a later time point, 134 days after inoculation (105 days
after the end of Ab therapy), viral loads in both the brains
and spinal cords of anti-CD154 treated mice had returned to
control levels (Fig.
4b). This may be explained by the fact
that as the therapeutic anti-CD154 Ab is cleared, Th1 cells
may then resume their effector activity in the CNS and both
help to control viral replication (Fig.
4b) and contribute to
demyelination as a consequence of their inflammatory activity
(Fig.
1).
Progress of clinical disease is sustained in anti-CD154-treated
mice, albeit at a significantly slower rate than that of control-treated
mice (Fig.
1). Direct viral cytopathic effects on oligodendrocytes,
as reflected by the high CNS viral titers, were most probably
the cause of low-level demyelination observed in the CNS of
mice recently treated with anti-CD154, since little or no effector
Th1 cells are present at this time (Fig.
2). We and others have
demonstrated the critical nature of the CD154-CD40 ligand pair
interaction in the initiation of both CD4- and CD8-T-cell effector
function in the target organ (
1,
2,
10). Thus, inhibition of
T-cell function within the CNS would allow viral replication
to continue unchecked, as demonstrated in a lymphocytic choriomeningitis
virus model (
28). In contrast, since viral loads are significantly
lower in control Ab-treated mice, with higher levels of clinical
disease, it is likely that the T-cell-mediated inflammatory
response to both viral and myelin antigens within the CNS is
the major cause for demyelination and disease.
In summary, we demonstrate that CD154 blockade transiently inhibits T-cell effector function in the CNS of mice with ongoing TMEV-IDD. However, due to the significant long-term effect of anti-CD154 Ab treatment on suppression of antiviral immune responses in the CNS, these data suggest caution in the use of this immunotherapeutic regimen for the treatment of chronic-progressive forms of MS, which may be associated with a persistent CNS virus infection, and perhaps of relapsing forms where disease exacerbation is triggered by flaring of a viral infection.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This work was supported by U.S. Public Health Service National
Institutes of Health research grants U19 AI/DK-51973, NS30871,
and NS34819 and National Multiple Sclerosis Society grant RG3289-A-5.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Microbiology-Immunology, Northwestern University Medical School, 303 East Chicago Ave., Chicago, IL 60611. Phone: (312) 503-7674. Fax: (312) 503-1339. E-mail:
s-d-miller{at}nwu.edu.


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Journal of Virology, February 2003, p. 2247-2250, Vol. 77, No. 3
0022-538X/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JVI.77.3.2247-2250.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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