IFN-gamma is not required in the IL-12 response to vesicular stomatitis virus infection of the olfactory bulb.

  • Komatsu T
  • Reiss C
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Abstract

In this report, the role of IFN-gamma in host defense to exogenous IL-12 and clearance of vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) from the central nervous system was examined. Wild-type and IFN-gamma knockout mice infected with VSV were treated with IL-12 or medium. In both groups, IL-12 treatment resulted in 1) substantially decreased VSV titers in brain homogenates and diminished immunohistochemical detection of VSV Ags in tissue sections; 2) induction of types 1, 2, and 3 nitric oxide synthase; and 3) induction of MHC molecules and rapid infiltration of both T cells and NK cells. These results suggest that IFN-gamma production, both systemically and in the olfactory bulb, contributes to but is not essential for clearance of VSV from the brain. Neutralization of TNF-alpha in IFN-gamma knockout mice mice treated with IL-12 was accompanied by the same immunohistochemical changes, implying that neither IFN-gamma nor TNF-alpha was required. In vitro studies using purified IL-12 or IFN-gamma in culture medium induced nitric oxide synthase isoforms in neurons, glia, and macrophages, and MHC II on glia and macrophages. These data suggest that IL-12 directly activates neurons to promote viral clearance in vivo.

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Komatsu, T., & Reiss, C. S. (1997). IFN-gamma is not required in the IL-12 response to vesicular stomatitis virus infection of the olfactory bulb. The Journal of Immunology, 159(7), 3444–3452. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.159.7.3444

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