Immunosuppression and resultant viral persistence by specific viral targeting of dendritic cells

N Sevilla, S Kunz, A Holz, H Lewicki… - The Journal of …, 2000 - rupress.org
N Sevilla, S Kunz, A Holz, H Lewicki, D Homann, H Yamada, KP Campbell, JC de la Torre…
The Journal of experimental medicine, 2000rupress.org
Among cells of the immune system, CD11c+ and DEC-205+ splenic dendritic cells primarily
express the cellular receptor (α-dystroglycan [α-DG]) for lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus
(LCMV). By selection, strains and variants of LCMV that bind α-DG with high affinity are
associated with virus replication in the white pulp, show preferential replication in a majority
of CD11c+ and DEC-205+ cells, cause immunosuppression, and establish a persistent
infection. In contrast, viral strains and variants that bind with low affinity to α-DG are …
Among cells of the immune system, CD11c+ and DEC-205+ splenic dendritic cells primarily express the cellular receptor (α-dystroglycan [α-DG]) for lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV). By selection, strains and variants of LCMV that bind α-DG with high affinity are associated with virus replication in the white pulp, show preferential replication in a majority of CD11c+ and DEC-205+ cells, cause immunosuppression, and establish a persistent infection. In contrast, viral strains and variants that bind with low affinity to α-DG are associated with viral replication in the red pulp, display minimal replication in CD11c+ and DEC-205+ cells, and generate a robust anti-LCMV cytotoxic T lymphocyte response that clears the virus infection. Differences in binding affinities can be mapped to a single amino acid change in the viral glycoprotein 1 ligand that binds to α-DG. These findings indicate that receptor–virus interaction on dendritic cells in vivo can be an essential step in the initiation of virus-induced immunosuppression and viral persistence.
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