Borna disease virus-specific T cells protect against or cause immunopathological borna disease

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Abstract

In this report we show that passive immunization of Lewis rats with viable CD4+. Borna disease virus (BDV)-specific T cells before infection with BDV resulted in protection against BD, whereas inoculation of these T cells after BDV infection induced clinical disease with more rapid onset than seen in BDV control animals. The protective as well as encephalitogenic effector functions of BDV-specific CD4+ T cells were mediated only by viable BDV- specific T cells. The protective situation was obtained by passive transfer of BDV-specific T cells into animals inoculated later with virus, whereas the immunopathological situation was observed when virus-specific T cells developed normally or after adoptive transfer, and appeared on the scene after considerable virus replication in the brain.

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Richt, J. A., Schmeel, A., Frese, K., Carbone, K. M., Narayan, O., & Rott, R. (1994). Borna disease virus-specific T cells protect against or cause immunopathological borna disease. Journal of Experimental Medicine, 179(5), 1467–1473. https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.179.5.1467

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