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.
CITATION STYLE
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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