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Live, Attenuated Venezuelan Equine Encephalitis Virus Vaccine (TC83) Causes Persistent Brain Infection in Mice with Non-functional αβ T-Cells
Author(s) -
Katherine Taylor,
Olga A. Kolokoltsova,
Shan E. Ronca,
Mark Estes,
Slobodan Paessler
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
frontiers in microbiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.701
H-Index - 135
ISSN - 1664-302X
DOI - 10.3389/fmicb.2017.00081
Subject(s) - viral encephalitis , virology , encephalitis , virus , immunology , biology , t cell receptor , inflammation , venezuelan equine encephalitis virus , immune system , medicine , t cell
Intranasal infection with vaccine strain of Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus (TC83) caused persistent viral infection in the brains of mice without functional αβ T-cells (αβ-TCR -/-). Remarkably, viral kinetics, host response gene transcripts and symptomatic disease are similar between αβ-TCR -/- and wild-type C57BL/6 (WT) mice during acute phase of infection [0–13 days post-infection (dpi)]. While WT mice clear infectious virus in the brain by 13 dpi, αβ-TCR -/- maintain infectious virus in the brain to 92 dpi. Persistent brain infection in αβ-TCR -/- correlated with inflammatory infiltrates and elevated cytokine protein levels in the brain at later time points. Persistent brain infection of αβ-TCR -/- mice provides a novel model to study prolonged alphaviral infection as well as the effects and biomarkers of long-term viral inflammation in the brain.

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