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Publication : Genetic labeling reveals altered turnover and stability of innate lymphocytes in latent mouse cytomegalovirus infection.

First Author  Busche A Year  2011
Journal  J Immunol Volume  186
Issue  5 Pages  2918-25
PubMed ID  21270406 Mgi Jnum  J:169388
Mgi Id  MGI:4940920 Doi  10.4049/jimmunol.1003232
Citation  Busche A, et al. (2011) Genetic labeling reveals altered turnover and stability of innate lymphocytes in latent mouse cytomegalovirus infection. J Immunol 186(5):2918-25
abstractText  Mouse CMV (MCMV) infection rapidly induces the proliferation of NK cells, which correlates with immunological protection. Whether NK cells primed during acute response against MCMV are maintained for the long term is not known. In this study, we used TcrdH2BeGFP mice in which maturing NK cells are genetically labeled with a pulse of very stable histone-2B-eGFP. In this system, we found that the reporter protein was diluted out upon NK cell division during acute MCMV infection. At the same time, mature NK cells in uninfected mice showed only very limited turnover in vivo. Three months after primary infection when MCMV latency was established, the majority of peripheral NK cells still displayed a higher record of proliferation than NK cells in mock-infected controls. This observation included both Ly49H(+) and Ly49H(-) NK cells. Conversely, naive NK cells did not show more proliferation after transfer into latently MCMV-infected mice than that after transfer into mock-infected control mice. This indicated that the observed alterations of the NK cell compartment in MCMV latency were 'legacy' (i.e., resulting from prior events during the initial immune response). Together, these results suggest that antiviral immune responses induce sustained alterations of innate lymphocyte populations that extend far beyond the first days of acute infection.
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