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Thymic Lesions in Cats Infected with a Pathogenic Molecular Clone or an ORF-A/2 -Deficient Molecular Clone of Feline Immunodeficiency Virus
Author(s) -
Norway Rm,
Crawford Pc,
Johnson Cm,
Ayalew Mergia
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
journal of virology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.617
H-Index - 292
eISSN - 1070-6321
pISSN - 0022-538X
DOI - 10.1128/jvi.75.13.5833-5841.2001
Subject(s) - biology , feline immunodeficiency virus , virology , clone (java method) , viral replication , thymocyte , cd8 , virus , lymphatic system , viral load , microbiology and biotechnology , immunology , immune system , lentivirus , viral disease , gene , biochemistry
Previous studies using feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV) molecular clones lacking the putative transactivator gene (ORF-A/2) failed to address the issue of thymus pathogenesis or investigate the levels of viral replication in separate lymphoid compartments (Y. Inoshima, et al., J. Virol. 70:8518-8526, 1996; E. E. Sparger, et al., Virology 205:546-553, 1994). Using a highly pathogenic molecular clone of FIV, JSY3, and an ORF-A/2-deficient mutant, JSY3DeltaORF-A/2, we compared viral replication and the extent of thymic dysfunction as measured by the formation of lymphoid follicles and alteration of the thymocyte subsets. Viral replication was reduced in JSY3DeltaORF-A/2-infected cats as measured by lymphocyte coculture, immunohistochemistry, and quantitative PCR. Cell-associated viral load measured by lymphocyte coculture varied in a tissue-dependent manner with replication highest in lymphocytes isolated from the thymus, lower in those from the peripheral blood, and lowest in those from lymph node. Thymic proviral load and the number of viral p24 Gag-positive cells within the thymus detected by immunohistochemistry were also reduced. In addition, the onset of a reduced peripheral blood CD4/CD8 ratio was delayed in JSY3DeltaORF-A/2-infected cats. The formation and extent of thymic lymphoid follicular hyperplasia were similar in JSY3 and JSY3DeltaORF-A/2-infected cats as measured by anticytokeratin immunohistochemistry and flow cytometry for percent pan T-negative, immunoglobulin G-positive cells within the thymus. In contrast, comparison of thymocyte subpopulations demonstrated a reduced expansion of single-positive CD4(-) CD8(+) thymocytes in JSY3DeltaORF-A/2-infected cats. Level of viral replication, therefore, may not correlate with the formation of thymic lymphoid follicles but may correlate with the expansion of the single-positive CD4(-) CD8(+) thymocyte subpopulation.

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