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Publication : Type I IFN modulates innate and specific antiviral immunity.

First Author  Durbin JE Year  2000
Journal  J Immunol Volume  164
Issue  8 Pages  4220-8
PubMed ID  10754318 Mgi Jnum  J:123432
Mgi Id  MGI:3718296 Doi  10.4049/jimmunol.164.8.4220
Citation  Durbin JE, et al. (2000) Type I IFN modulates innate and specific antiviral immunity. J Immunol 164(8):4220-8
abstractText  IFNs protect from virus infection by inducing an antiviral state and by modulating the immune response. Using mice deficient in multiple aspects of IFN signaling, we found that type I and type II IFN play distinct although complementing roles in the resolution of influenza viral disease. Both types of IFN influenced the profile of cytokines produced by T lymphocytes, with a significant bias toward Th2 differentiation occurring in the absence of responsiveness to either IFN. However, although a Th1 bias produced through inhibition of Th2 differentiation by IFN-gamma was not required to resolve infection, loss of type I IFN responsiveness led to exacerbated disease pathology characterized by granulocytic pulmonary inflammatory infiltrates. Responsiveness to type I IFN did not influence the generation of virus-specific cytotoxic lymphocytes or the rate of viral clearance, but induction of IL-10 and IL-15 in infected lungs through a type I IFN-dependent pathway correlated with a protective response to virus. Combined loss of both IFN pathways led to a severely polarized proinflammatory immune response and exacerbated disease. These results reveal an unexpected role for type I IFN in coordinating the host response to viral infection and controlling inflammation in the absence of a direct effect on virus replication.
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