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Publication : Interferon gamma regulates acute and latent murine cytomegalovirus infection and chronic disease of the great vessels.

First Author  Presti RM Year  1998
Journal  J Exp Med Volume  188
Issue  3 Pages  577-88
PubMed ID  9687534 Mgi Jnum  J:115139
Mgi Id  MGI:3690709 Doi  10.1084/jem.188.3.577
Citation  Presti RM, et al. (1998) Interferon gamma regulates acute and latent murine cytomegalovirus infection and chronic disease of the great vessels. J Exp Med 188(3):577-88
abstractText  To define immune mechanisms that regulate chronic and latent herpesvirus infection, we analyzed the role of interferon gamma (IFN-gamma) during murine cytomegalovirus (MCMV) infection. Lethality studies demonstrated a net protective role for IFN-gamma, independent of IFN-alpha/beta, during acute MCMV infection. Mice lacking the IFN-gamma receptor (IFN-gammaR-/-) developed and maintained striking chronic aortic inflammation. Arteritis was associated with inclusion bodies and MCMV antigen in the aortic media. To understand how lack of IFN-gamma responses could lead to chronic vascular disease, we evaluated the role of IFN-gamma in MCMV latency. MCMV-infected IFN-gammaR-/- mice shed preformed infectious MCMV in spleen, peritoneal exudate cells, and salivary gland for up to 6 mo after infection, whereas the majority of congenic control animals cleared chronic productive infection. However, the IFN-gammaR was not required for establishment of latency. Using an in vitro explant reactivation model, we showed that IFN-gamma reversibly inhibited MCMV reactivation from latency. This was at least partly explained by IFN-gamma- mediated blockade of growth of low levels of MCMV in tissue explants. These in vivo and in vitro data suggest that IFN-gamma regulation of reactivation from latency contributes to control of chronic vascular disease caused by MCMV. These studies are the first to demonstrate that a component of the immune system (IFN-gamma) is necessary to regulate MCMV-associated elastic arteritis and latency in vivo and reactivation of a herpesvirus from latency in vitro. This provides a new model for analysis of the interrelationships among herpesvirus latency, the immune system, and chronic disease of the great vessels.
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