To determine the relationship between influenza A virus replication and innate antiviral immune responses, rhesus monkeys were given oseltamivir before influenza A/Memphis/7/01 (H1N1) challenge. We found that oseltamivir treatment significantly reduced viral replication in the trachea (p < 0.029). Further, in the trachea of both treated and untreated monkeys the mRNA levels of most innate antiviral molecules in the IFN-αβ pathway were dramatically increased by 24 h postinfection. However, the mRNA level of a single IFN-stimulated gene, MxA (myxovirus resistance A), the IFN-stimulated gene known to be critical in blocking influenza virus replication, was significantly lower in the tracheal lavages of untreated monkeys than in the oseltamivir-treated monkeys (p = 0.05). These results demonstrate for the first time that uncontrolled influenza A virus replication actively suppresses MxA gene expression and emphasize the critical role of innate immunity in controlling influenza virus replication in vivo.
CITATION STYLE
Carroll, T. D., Matzinger, S. R., Genescà, M., Fritts, L., Colòn, R., McChesney, M. B., & Miller, C. J. (2008). Interferon-Induced Expression of MxA in the Respiratory Tract of Rhesus Macaques Is Suppressed by Influenza Virus Replication. The Journal of Immunology, 180(4), 2385–2395. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.180.4.2385
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