Delayed clearance of Sendai virus in mice lacking class I MHC- restricted CD8+ T cells

The role and interdependence of CD8+ and CD4+ alpha beta-T cells in the acute response after respiratory infection with the murine parainfluenza type 1 virus, Sendai virus, has been analyzed for H-2b mice. Enrichment of CD8+ virus-specific CTL effectors in the lungs of immunologically intact C57BL/6...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of immunology (1950) 1992-08, Vol.149 (4), p.1319-1325
Hauptverfasser: Hou, S, Doherty, PC, Zijlstra, M, Jaenisch, R, Katz, JM
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The role and interdependence of CD8+ and CD4+ alpha beta-T cells in the acute response after respiratory infection with the murine parainfluenza type 1 virus, Sendai virus, has been analyzed for H-2b mice. Enrichment of CD8+ virus-specific CTL effectors in the lungs of immunologically intact C57BL/6 animals coincided with the clearance of the virus from this site by day 10 after infection. Removal of the CD4+ T cells by in vivo mAb treatment did not affect appreciably either the recruitment of CD8+ T cells to the infected lung, or their development into virus-specific cytotoxic effectors. In contrast, depletion of the CD8+ subset delayed virus clearance, although most mice survived the infection. Transgenic H-2b F3 mice homozygous (-/-) for a beta 2 microglobulin (beta 2-m) gene disruption, which lack both class I MHC glycoproteins and mature CD8+ alpha beta-T cells, showed a comparable, delayed clearance of Sendai virus from the lung. Virus-specific, class II MHC-restricted CTL were demonstrated in both freshly isolated bronchoalveolar lavage populations and cultured lymph node and spleen tissue from the beta 2-m (-/-) transgenics. Treatment of the beta 2-m (-/-) mice with the mAb to CD4 led to delayed virus clearance and death, which was also the case for normal mice that were depleted simultaneously of the CD4+ and CD8+ subsets. These results indicate that, although classical class I MHC-restricted CD8+ cytotoxic T cells normally play a dominant role in the recovery of mice acutely infected with Sendai virus, alternative mechanisms involving CD4+ T cells exist and can compensate, in time, for the loss of CD8+ T cell function.
ISSN:0022-1767
1550-6606
DOI:10.4049/jimmunol.149.4.1319