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Critical role for a high-affinity chemokine-binding protein in γ-herpesvirus–induced lethal meningitis
Victor van Berkel, … , Samuel H. Speck, Herbert W. Virgin IV
Victor van Berkel, … , Samuel H. Speck, Herbert W. Virgin IV
Published April 1, 2002
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2002;109(7):905-914. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI14358.
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Article Immunology

Critical role for a high-affinity chemokine-binding protein in γ-herpesvirus–induced lethal meningitis

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Abstract

Chemokines are involved in recruitment and activation of hematopoietic cells in sites of infection and inflammation. The M3 gene of the γ-herpesvirus γHV68 encodes an abundant secreted protein that binds CC chemokines with high affinity. We report here that this gene is essential for efficient induction of lethal meningitis by γHV68. An M3 mutant γHV68 (γHV68-M3.stop) was 100-fold less virulent than wild-type or marker rescue control (γHV68-M3.MR) viruses after intracerebral inoculation. After intracerebral inoculation, γHV68-M3.stop grew to lower titers than γHV68 or γHV68-M3.MR in the brain but spread to and grew normally in the spleen and lung. Expression of several CC chemokines was significantly induced in the CNS by γHV68 infection. Consistent with M3 acting by blockade of CC chemokine action, γHV68 induced a neutrophilic meningeal inflammatory infiltrate, while γHV68-M3.stop induced an infiltrate in which lymphocytes and macrophages predominated. In contrast to the important role of M3 in lethal meningitis, M3 was not required for establishment or reactivation from latent infection or induction of chronic arteritis. These data suggest a role for chemokines in the protection of the nervous system from viral infection and that the M3 protein acts in a tissue-specific fashion during acute but not chronic γHV68 infection to limit CC chemokine–induced inflammatory responses.

Authors

Victor van Berkel, Beth Levine, Sharookh B. Kapadia, James E. Goldman, Samuel H. Speck, Herbert W. Virgin IV

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Figure 8

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γHV68-M3.stop establishes and reactivates from latency normally. Sixteen...
γHV68-M3.stop establishes and reactivates from latency normally. Sixteen days after inoculation with either 106 PFU intraperitoneally (a, b, e, and f) or 4 × 105 PFU intranasally (c, d, g, and h), splenocytes (a, c, e, and g) and peritoneal exudate cells (b, d, f, and h) were harvested from B6 mice. Ex vivo reactivation (a, b, c, and d) was monitored by plating cells over an indicator monolayer and monitoring for viral cytopathic effect 21 days after plating (square symbols). Duplicate cell samples were mechanically disrupted to control for persistent viral replication (triangle symbols, denoted as disrupted in the figure). (e, f, g, and h) Percentage of cells harboring viral genome was assessed through a limiting dilution nested PCR assay. Data are pooled from three independent experiments of five mice per infectious condition (15 mice total per condition).

Copyright © 2022 American Society for Clinical Investigation
ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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