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Publication : Early virus-host interactions dictate the course of a persistent infection.

First Author  Sullivan BM Year  2015
Journal  PLoS Pathog Volume  11
Issue  1 Pages  e1004588
PubMed ID  25569216 Mgi Jnum  J:247332
Mgi Id  MGI:5916355 Doi  10.1371/journal.ppat.1004588
Citation  Sullivan BM, et al. (2015) Early virus-host interactions dictate the course of a persistent infection. PLoS Pathog 11(1):e1004588
abstractText  Many persistent viral infections are characterized by a hypofunctional T cell response and the upregulation of negative immune regulators. These events occur days after the initiation of infection. However, the very early host-virus interactions that determine the establishment of viral persistence remain poorly uncharacterized. Here we show that to establish persistence, LCMV must counteract an innate anti-viral immune response within eight hours after infection. While the virus triggers cytoplasmic RNA sensing pathways soon after infection, LCMV counteracts this pathway through a rapid increase in viral titers leading to a dysfunctional immune response characterized by a high cytokine and chemokine expression profile. This altered immune environment allows for viral replication in the splenic white pulp as well as infection of immune cells essential to an effective anti-viral immune response. Our findings illustrate how early events during infection critically dictate the characteristics of the immune response to infection and facilitate either virus control and clearance or persistence.
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