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1.
Medicina (B.Aires) ; 57(Supl.2): 34-42, Aug. 1997.
Article Dans Anglais | LILACS | ID: lil-320010

Résumé

All animals, including humans, show differential susceptibility to infection with viruses. Study of the genetics of susceptibility or resistance to specific pathogens is most easily studied in inbred mice. We have been using mouse mammary tumor virus (MMTV), a retrovirus that causes mammary tumors in mice, to study virus/host interactions. These studies have focused on understanding the mechanisms that determine genetic susceptibility to MMTV-induced mammary tumors, the regulation of virus gene expression in vivo and how the virus is transmitted between different cell types. We have found that some endogenous MMTVs are only expressed in lymphoid tissue and that a single base pair change in the long terminal repeat of MMTV determines whether the virus is expressed in mammary gland. This expression in lymphoid cells is necessary for the infectious cycle of MMTV, and both T and B cells express and shed MMTV. Infected lymphocytes are required not only for the initial introduction of MMTV to the mammary gland, but also for virus spread at later times. Without this virus spread, mammary tumorigenesis is dramatically reduced. Mammary tumor incidence is also affected by the genetic background of the mouse and at least one gene that affects infection of both lymphocytes and mammary cells has not yet been identified. The results obtained from these studies will greatly increase our understanding of the genetic mechanisms that viruses use to infect their hosts and how genetic resistance to such viruses in the hosts occurs.


Sujets)
Animaux , Souris , Prédisposition génétique à une maladie , Infections à Retroviridae/génétique , Infections à virus oncogènes/génétique , Nucléotides/génétique , Virus de la tumeur mammaire de la souris/génétique , Gammaretrovirus/génétique , Lymphocytes B , Infections à Retroviridae/immunologie , Infections à virus oncogènes/immunologie , Intégration virale/génétique , Intégration virale/immunologie , Séquence glucidique/génétique , Lymphocytes T , Virus de la tumeur mammaire de la souris/immunologie , Gammaretrovirus/immunologie
2.
Medicina (B.Aires) ; 57(Suppl.2): 34-42, Aug. 1997.
Article Dans Espagnol | LILACS, BINACIS | ID: biblio-1165035

Résumé

All animals, including humans, show differential susceptibility to infection with viruses. Study of the genetics of susceptibility or resistance to specific pathogens is most easily studied in inbred mice. We have been using mouse mammary tumor virus (MMTV), a retrovirus that causes mammary tumors in mice, to study virus/host interactions. These studies have focused on understanding the mechanisms that determine genetic susceptibility to MMTV-induced mammary tumors, the regulation of virus gene expression in vivo and how the virus is transmitted between different cell types. We have found that some endogenous MMTVs are only expressed in lymphoid tissue and that a single base pair change in the long terminal repeat of MMTV determines whether the virus is expressed in mammary gland. This expression in lymphoid cells is necessary for the infectious cycle of MMTV, and both T and B cells express and shed MMTV. Infected lymphocytes are required not only for the initial introduction of MMTV to the mammary gland, but also for virus spread at later times. Without this virus spread, mammary tumorigenesis is dramatically reduced. Mammary tumor incidence is also affected by the genetic background of the mouse and at least one gene that affects infection of both lymphocytes and mammary cells has not yet been identified. The results obtained from these studies will greatly increase our understanding of the genetic mechanisms that viruses use to infect their hosts and how genetic resistance to such viruses in the hosts occurs.


Sujets)
Animaux , Gammaretrovirus/génétique , Infections à virus oncogènes/génétique , Infections à Retroviridae/génétique , Nucléotides/génétique , Prédisposition génétique à une maladie , Virus de la tumeur mammaire de la souris/génétique , Gammaretrovirus/immunologie , Infections à virus oncogènes/immunologie , Infections à Retroviridae/immunologie , Intégration virale/génétique , Intégration virale/immunologie , Lymphocytes B/immunologie , Lymphocytes T/immunologie , Séquence glucidique/génétique , Virus de la tumeur mammaire de la souris/immunologie
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