ABSTRACT
TC83 is a human vaccine with investigational new drug status and is used as a prototype Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus for pathogenesis and antiviral research. Differing from other experimental models, the virus causes high titer infection in the brain and 90-100% mortality in the C3H/HeN murine model. To better characterize the susceptibility to disease development in C3H/HeN mice, we have analyzed the gene transcriptomes and cytokine production in the brains of infected mice. Our analysis indicated the potential importance of natural killer cells in the encephalitic disease development. This paper describes for the first time a pathogenic role for natural killer cells in VEEV encephalitis.
Subject(s)
Encephalitis Virus, Venezuelan Equine/immunology , Encephalitis Virus, Venezuelan Equine/pathogenicity , Encephalomyelitis, Venezuelan Equine/immunology , Encephalomyelitis, Venezuelan Equine/pathology , Killer Cells, Natural/immunology , Animals , Brain/pathology , Brain/virology , Cytokines/metabolism , Disease Models, Animal , Encephalomyelitis, Venezuelan Equine/mortality , Gene Expression Profiling , Mice , Mice, Inbred C3H , Survival AnalysisABSTRACT
Studying the mechanisms of host survival resulting from viral encephalitis is critical to the development of vaccines. Here we have shown in several independent studies that high dose treatment with neutralizing antibody prior to intranasal infection with Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus had an antiviral effect in the visceral organs and prolonged survival time of infected mice, even in the absence of alphabeta T cells. Nevertheless, antibody treatment did not prevent the development of lethal encephalitis. On the contrary, the adoptive transfer of primed CD4(+) T cells was necessary to prevent lethal encephalitis in mice lacking alphabeta T cell receptor.