Apoptotic Regulation of T Cells and Absence of Immune Deficiency in Virus-Infected Gamma Interferon Receptor Knockout Mice

  • Lohman B
  • Welsh R
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Abstract

Acute viral infections often induce a transient period of immune deficiency in which the host’s T cells fail to proliferate in response to T-cell mitogens and fail to make an antigen-specific memory recall response. This has been associated with the enhanced sensitivity of these highly activated T cells to undergo apoptosis, or activation-induced cell death (AICD), upon T-cell receptor ligation. Here we show that gamma interferon receptor-deficient (IFN-γ R −/− ) mice mount a T-cell response to lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) infection but fail to undergo the transient immune deficiency. Instead, their T cells were hyperproliferative and relatively, but not completely, resistant to AICD. The immune response returned to homeostasis, but with delayed kinetics, in parallel with delayed clearance of the virus. Wild-type mice receiving high doses of disseminating LCMV Clone 13 are known to undergo clonal exhaustion of their virus-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL). To determine whether this process was mediated by AICD associated with IFN-γ or with Fas-Fas ligand interactions, LCMV-specific precursor CTL frequencies were examined in LCMV Clone 13-infected IFN-γ R −/− or lpr (Fas-deficient) mice. In both instances, viral persistence was established and CTL precursors were greatly eliminated. This finding indicates that clonal exhaustion of CTL does not require IFN-γ or Fas, even though both molecules influence AICD and the transient immune deficiency seen in the LCMV infection.

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Lohman, B. L., & Welsh, R. M. (1998). Apoptotic Regulation of T Cells and Absence of Immune Deficiency in Virus-Infected Gamma Interferon Receptor Knockout Mice. Journal of Virology, 72(10), 7815–7821. https://doi.org/10.1128/jvi.72.10.7815-7821.1998

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