| First Author | Goulding J | Year | 2012 |
| Journal | J Immunol | Volume | 189 |
| Issue | 5 | Pages | 2432-40 |
| PubMed ID | 22826318 | Mgi Jnum | J:189726 |
| Mgi Id | MGI:5446932 | Doi | 10.4049/jimmunol.1200799 |
| Citation | Goulding J, et al. (2012) CD8 T cells are essential for recovery from a respiratory vaccinia virus infection. J Immunol 189(5):2432-40 |
| abstractText | The precise immune components required for protection against a respiratory Orthopoxvirus infection, such as human smallpox or monkeypox, remain to be fully identified. In this study, we used the virulent Western Reserve strain of vaccinia virus (VACV-WR) to model a primary respiratory Orthopoxvirus infection. Naive mice infected with VACV-WR mounted an early CD8 T cell response directed against dominant and subdominant VACV-WR Ags, followed by a CD4 T cell and Ig response. In contrast to other VACV-WR infection models that highlight the critical requirement for CD4 T cells and Ig, we found that only mice deficient in CD8 T cells presented with severe cachexia, pulmonary inflammation, viral dissemination, and 100% mortality. Depletion of CD8 T cells at specified times throughout infection highlighted that they perform their critical function between days 4 and 6 postinfection and that their protective requirement is critically dictated by initial viral load and virulence. Finally, the ability of adoptively transferred naive CD8 T cells to protect RAG(-)/(-) mice against a lethal VACV-WR infection demonstrated that they are both necessary and sufficient in protecting against a primary VACV-WR infection of the respiratory tract. |