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Publication : The inflammatory response to nonfatal Sindbis virus infection of the nervous system is more severe in SJL than in BALB/c mice and is associated with low levels of IL-4 mRNA and high levels of IL-10-producing CD4+ T cells.

First Author  Rowell JF Year  1999
Journal  J Immunol Volume  162
Issue  3 Pages  1624-32
PubMed ID  9973422 Mgi Jnum  J:52273
Mgi Id  MGI:1328709 Doi  10.4049/jimmunol.162.3.1624
Citation  Rowell JF, et al. (1999) The inflammatory response to nonfatal Sindbis virus infection of the nervous system is more severe in SJL than in BALB/c mice and is associated with low levels of IL-4 mRNA and high levels of IL-10-producing CD4+ T cells. J Immunol 162(3):1624-32
abstractText  SJL mice are susceptible to inflammatory autoimmune diseases of the central nervous system (CNS), while BALB/c mice are relatively resistant. To understand differences in immune responses that may contribute to autoimmune neurologic disease, we compared the responses of SJL and BALB/c mice to infection with Sindbis virus, a virus that causes acute nonfatal encephalomyelitis in both strains of mice. Clearance of virus was similar, but SJL mice developed a more intense inflammatory response in the brain and spinal cord and inflammation persisted for several weeks. Analysis of lymphocytes isolated from brains early after infection showed an absence of NK cells in SJL mice, while both strains of mice showed CD4+ and CD8+ T cells. During the second week after infection, CD4+ T cells increased in SJL mice and the proportion of CD8+ T cells decreased, while the opposite pattern was seen in BALB/c mice. Expression of IL-10 mRNA was higher and IL-4 mRNA was lower in the brains of infected SJL than in BALB/c mice, while expression of the mRNAs of IL-6, IL-1beta, TNFalpha, and the Th1 cytokines IL-2, IL-12, and IFN-gamma was similar. Lymphocytes isolated from the CNS of SJL mice produced large amounts of IL-10. CNS lymphocytes from both strains of mice produced IFN-gamma in response to stimulation with Sindbis virus, but not in response to myelin basic protein. These data suggest that IL-10-producing CD4+ T cells are differentially recruited to or regulated within the CNS of SJL mice compared with BALB/c mice infected with Sindbis virus, a characteristic that may be related to low levels of IL-4, and is likely to be involved in susceptibility of SJL mice to CNS inflammatory diseases.
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