Natural Measles Causes Prolonged Suppression of Interleukin‐12 Production
Author(s) -
Sowsan Atabani,
Adriana A. Byrnes,
Assan Jaye,
Michael Kidd,
Albert Frank Magnusen,
Hilton Whittle,
Christopher L. Karp
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
the journal of infectious diseases
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.69
H-Index - 252
eISSN - 1537-6613
pISSN - 0022-1899
DOI - 10.1086/321009
Subject(s) - immunology , measles virus , measles , cytokine , immune system , immunity , morbillivirus , cd46 , measles vaccine , interleukin 10 , biology , interleukin , medicine , complement system , immunization , vaccination
Among vaccine-preventable diseases, measles is the preeminent killer of children worldwide. Infection with measles virus (MV) is associated with prolonged suppression of cell-mediated immune responses, a phenomenon that is thought to underlie the susceptibility to secondary infections that accounts for most measles-related mortality. Interleukin (IL)-12 is critical for the orchestration of cellular immunity. MV specifically ablates IL-12 production by monocyte/macrophages in vitro through binding to CD46, a complement regulatory protein that is an MV receptor. To address the effect of MV on IL-12 responses in vivo, cytokine production was examined in Gambian patients with measles. IL-12 production by peripheral blood monocytes from such patients is markedly suppressed, which provides a unifying mechanism for many of the immunologic abnormalities associated with measles. This suppression is prolonged, with significant, stimulus-specific inhibition of IL-12 production demonstrable months after recovery from acute infection. However, despite this suppression, IL-12 responsiveness remains intact.
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