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1.
A form of acute retinal necrosis occurred in the contralateral eyes of susceptible mice 1 week after each received a uniocular injection of live herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) in the anterior chamber. Although these mice did not develop systemic delayed hypersensitivity to virus antigens, their sera contained virus-specific antibodies at the time contralateral retinitis occurred. These findings suggest that systemic immunity might not be able to protect against contralateral retinitis. To explore this possibility further, we examined lymph nodes and spleens of intraocularly infected mice to determine whether their lymphoid tissues contained primed HSV-1-specific cytotoxic T cells. Virus-specific cytotoxic T cells were readily identified in these mice. We wondered why successful immune priming did not confer protection against HSV-1 retinitis. We examined this issue by evaluating the capacity of in vitro-generated, HSV-1-specific effector T cells to prevent retinitis by infusing these cells by various routes and at various times into mice that received an intracameral injection of HSV-1. The results revealed that virus-specific effector cells could prevent contralateral retinitis if injected intravenously or into the anterior chamber of the contralateral eye at the same time that virus was injected into one eye. However, the effector cells failed to prevent retinitis if they were injected into the same eye that received HSV-1 or if their intravenous administration was delayed until 24 h after the HSV-1 injection into the eye. We concluded that immune T cells can protect against contralateral retinal necrosis caused by uniocular injection of HSV-1 into the anterior chamber but only if they are administered during the first 24 h after virus infection. We propose that a retinitis-inducing process is set in motion during this early time interval postinfection. Once the process has been initiated and established, it is no longer susceptible to immune intervention. It would appear that mice that are susceptible to contralateral retinitis fail to mobilize a protective response quickly enough to ward off the establishment of the retinitis-inducing process and its disastrous eventuality.  相似文献   

2.
Previous studies have shown that two types of virus-specific suppressor T cells (Ts) are induced in mice made tolerant with herpes simplex virus (HSV)-infected spleen cells (SC). One type of Ts blocks the afferent phase of the delayed hypersensitivity response to HSV (Ts-aff), and the other blocks the efferent or effector phase (Ts-eff). In this report we show that the induction requirements for these suppressor populations differ. Injection of SC infected for 6 h with HSV at a multiplicity of infection of 5 or less or treated with heat-inactivated virus induced only Ts-aff. Similar results were seen with SC incubated for 90 min in virus-free preparations containing only viral proteins. In contrast, the Ts-eff population was induced only by SC treated for 6 h with infectious HSV at a multiplicity of infection of 10. Collectively, these data indicate that Ts-aff are induced by adsorbed HSV antigens on SC, whereas Ts-eff are induced by nascent HSV antigens expressed on infected SC. In addition to their induction requirements, the two types of regulatory cells differ in their expression of effector function. Ts-eff but not Ts-aff require a cyclophosphamide-sensitive target cell in the immune recipient for suppressor function. The possible identity of this target cell and the significance of the different induction requirements between the two types of Ts are discussed.  相似文献   

3.
4.
Physical mapping of herpes simplex virus-induced polypeptides.   总被引:86,自引:73,他引:13       下载免费PDF全文
Analysis of the polypeptides induced by 29 herpes simplex virus type 1/type 2 intertypic recombinants and correlation of the data with the crossover points in the recombinant DNAs have enabled the map positions of many polypeptides to be deduced. These include 25 polypeptides which label with [35S]methionine, 11 which label with [32P]orthophosphate, and 4 which label with [14C]glucosamine. Together with the data of Preston et al. (J. Virol., in press) on the mapping of five immediate-early polypeptides, the results show that representatives of four groups of proteins--immediate-early, late, phosphorylated, and glycosylated--map in both long and short regions. The functional organization of the herpes simplex virus genome does not therefore restrict any of these four groups to either the long or the short region.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Ultraviolet B irradiation (280 to 320 nm) of mice at the site of intradermal infection with herpes simplex virus type 2 increased the severity of the herpes simplex virus type 2 disease and decreased delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) responses to viral antigen. Decrease in DTH resulted from the induction of suppressor T cells, as evidenced by the ability of spleen cells from UV-irradiated mice to inhibit DTH and proliferative responses after adoptive transfer. Lymph node cells from UV-irradiated animals did not transfer suppression. DTH was suppressed at the induction but not the expression phase. Suppressor T cells were Lyt-1+, L3T4+, and their activity was antigen-specific. However, after in vitro culture of spleen cells from UV-irradiated mice with herpes simplex virus type 2 antigen, suppressor activity was mediated by Lyt-2+ cells. Culture supernatants contained soluble nonantigen-specific suppressive factors.  相似文献   

7.
BHK-21 cells infected with temperature-sensitive mutants of herpes simplex virus type 1 strain KOS representing 16 complementation groups were tested for susceptibility to complement-mediated immune cytolysis at permissive (34 degrees C) and nonpermissive (39 degrees C) temperatures. Only cells infected by mutants in complementation group E were resistant to immune cytolysis in a temperature-sensitive manner compared with wild-type infections. The expression of group E mutant cell surface antigens during infections at 34 and 39 degrees C was characterized by a combination of cell surface radioiodination, specific immunoprecipitation, and gel electrophoretic analysis of immunoprecipitates. Resistance to immune lysis at 39 degrees C correlated with the absence of viral antigens exposed at the cell surface. Intrinsic radiolabeling of group E mutant infections with [14C]glucosamine revealed that normal glycoproteins were produced at 34 degrees C but none were synthesized at 39 degrees C. The effect of 2-deoxy-D-glucose on glycosylation of group E mutants at 39 degrees C suggested that the viral glycoprotein precursors were not synthesized. The complementation group E mutants failed to complement herpes simplex virus type 1 mutants isolated by other workers. These included the group B mutants of strain KOS, the temperature-sensitive group D mutants of strain 17, and the LB2 mutant of strain HFEM. These mutants should be considered members of herpes simplex virus type 1 complementation group 1.2, in keeping with the new herpes simplex virus type 1 nomenclature.  相似文献   

8.
The activity of suppressor T cells has been demonstrated in almost every phase of the immune response. These regulatory cells modulate both humoral and cell-mediated immunity utilizing antigen-specific and nonspecific mechanisms. For comparative purposes two murine models are described, the nonspecific suppressor T cell stimulated by the mitogen concanavalin A and the antigen-specific suppressor T cell stimulated by injection of the synthetic terpolymer acid 60-L-alanine30-L-tyrosine10 (GAT) in nonresponder mice. These two T cells are similar to expression of Ly alloantigens, ability to inhibit antibody responses, and the mediation of suppression, at least in part, by soluble products. However, differences in radio-resistance and antigenic specificity of the suppressor T cells, as well as differences in molecular characteristics of the soluble factors and their targets suggest that these T cells regulate the immune response by different mechanisms. The relationship of these two suppressor T cells to other nonspecific and antigen-specific suppressor T cells is discussed.  相似文献   

9.
Two prominent anti-inflammatory mechanisms involved in controlling HSV-1-induced corneal immunopathology (stromal keratitis or SK) are the production of the cytokine IL-10 and the activity of natural regulatory T cells (nTregs). It is not known whether, under in vivo conditions, IL-10 and nTregs influence the corneal pathology independently or in concert. In the current study using wild-type and IL-10(-/-) animals, we have assessed the activity of nTregs in the absence of IL-10 both under in vitro and in vivo conditions. The IL-10(-/-) animals depleted of nTregs before ocular infection showed more severe SK lesions as compared with the undepleted IL-10(-/-) animals. In addition, nTregs purified from naive WT and IL-10(-/-) animals were equally able to suppress the proliferation and the cytokine production from anti-CD3-stimulated CD4(+)CD25(-) T cells in vitro. Furthermore, intracellular cytokine staining results indicated that nonregulatory cells expressing B220 and CD25 markers were the major IL-10-producing cell types in the lymphoid tissues of HSV-infected mice. In contrast, in the infected corneas, cells with the CD11b(+)Gr1(+) phenotype along with a minor population of Foxp3(-)CD4(+) and a few F4/80(+) cells produced IL-10. Our current investigations indicate that at least two independent anti-inflammatory mechanisms are involved in limiting the corneal lesions in SK, both of which may need to be modulated to control SK therapeutically.  相似文献   

10.
We have been studying delayed hypersensitivity (DH) to herpes simplex virus (HSV) in order to examine the role of this response in host defense against acute and recurrent HSV infections. In previous reports the basic parameters of DH to HSV have been characterized by using a murine ear swelling model, and also the regulation of DH to HSV induced by i.v. injection of the virus. In this paper, we describe a murine protection system and our use of the ability to specifically regulate DH to HSV to examine the correlation between T cells that transfer DH (TDH) and cells that transfer protection from acute HSV infection. Both DH and protection can be transferred with lymph node cells from mice immunized subcutaneously 4 days previously. The effector cell appears to be a T cell, because serum from these donors confers no protection and treatment of immune cells with anti-Thy-1.2 plus complement reduced their ability to protect. Tolerance of DH to HSV was induced by i.v. injection 7 days before subcutaneous immunization. Tolerized mice were unable to generate protective cells. Furthermore, tolerized mice contained suppressor T cells that suppressed not only DH but also the development of protective cells. Regulation of protective cells was shown to be virus specific, because mice tolerized with vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) were not impaired in their ability to generate T cells that protected from HSV infection. The correlation between the TDH cell and cells that transfer protection from acute HSV infection is discussed.  相似文献   

11.
Indirect evidence indicates that herpes simplex virus (HSV)-specific cytotoxic-T-lymphocyte induction is regulated by suppressor cells. To search for such suppressor effects, supernatant fluids from splenocyte cultures from normal and HSV-immune mice cultured either with or without viral stimulation were tested for their ability to inhibit HSV-specific cytotoxic-T-lymphocyte induction. Only the supernatant fluid from the HSV-stimulated, HSV-immune cultures contained a suppressor activity (HSV-SF). HSV-SF was produced by nylon-wool-purified Thy 1+ cells. HSV-SF was detectable after 3 days of culture and would only suppress cytotoxic-T-lymphocyte induction if HSV-SF was added within 24 h of initiation of the test cultures. HSV-SF was neither dialyzable nor heat stable. Molecular sieve chromatography of HSV-SF yielded multiple peaks of suppressor activity. Although most of these peaks exhibited nonspecific suppressor activity, the suppression mediated by the 90,000 to 150,000-molecular-weight fractions was antigen specific and genetically restricted. These results provide direct evidence for the regulation of HSV-cytotoxic-T-lymphocyte induction by a novel suppressor factor.  相似文献   

12.
Tolerance to dinitrochlorobenzene contact sensitivity induced i.v. injection of dinitrobenzenesulfonic acid in guinea pigs is a long-lasting phenomenon (up to 1 year). The tolerogen, however, was traceable in the circulation only up to 3 months after its application. In spite of that, tolerance was adoptively transferred by parabiosis 6 months after being induced. Moreover, active suppressor cells eliminated by cyclophosphamide treatment are able to regenerate in those adoptively tolerized animals. These results indicate that the tolerogenic injection stimulates precursors of suppressor cells to generate active suppressor cells and memory cells of suppression. The further formation of active suppressor cells from memory cells seems to be tolerogen independent, but the existence of specific stimulator cells for suppression may be considered. These cells may bind undetectable small amounts of tolerogen. The recovery of suppression might, however, be also due to recovery of suppressor cells which were temporarily inactivated but not destroyed by cyclophosphamide treatment.  相似文献   

13.
Infection of cells with herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) induces high levels of deoxypyrimidine triphosphatase. The majority of the enzyme activity is found in infected cell nuclei. A similar activity is induced by HSV type 2 (HSV-2) which, in contrast to the HSV-1 enzyme, fractionates to more than 99% in the soluble cytoplasmic extract. Of a series of temperature-sensitive mutants of HSV-1 studied, only the immediate-early mutants in complementation group 1-2 (strain 17 mutants tsD and tsK and strain KOS mutant tsB2) induced reduced levels of triphosphatase at nonpermissive temperature. Of a series of temperature-sensitive mutants of HSV-2 strain HG52, ts9 and ts13 failed to induce wild-type levels of the enzyme at nonpermissive temperature; ts9 was the most defective mutant with regard to triphosphatase expression of both herpes simplex virus serotypes. After shift-up from permissive to nonpermissive temperature, triphosphatase activity in cells infected with ts9 decreased rapidly, whereas all other mutants continued to exhibit enzyme levels comparable with controls kept at the permissive temperature. The type 1-specific nuclear expression of the triphosphatase was mapped physically by the use of HSV-1 x HSV-2 intertypic recombinants, based on enzyme levels different by more than two orders of magnitude found in nuclei of HSV-1- and HSV-2-infected cells. The locus for the type-specific expression maps between 0.67 and 0.68 fractional length on the HSV genome.  相似文献   

14.
Herpes simplex virus (HSV) induces within the host cell genome DNA amplification which can be suppressed by coinfection with adeno-associated virus (AAV). To characterize the AAV functions mediating this effect, cloned AAV type 2 wild-type or mutant genomes were transfected into simian virus 40 (SV40)-transformed hamster cells together with the six HSV replication genes (encoding UL5, UL8, major DNA-binding protein, DNA polymerase, UL42, and UL52) which together are necessary and sufficient for the induction of SV40 DNA amplification (R. Heilbronn and H. zur Hausen, J. Virol. 63:3683-3692, 1989). The AAV rep gene was identified as being responsible for the complete inhibition of HSV-induced SV40 DNA amplification. Likewise, rep inhibited origin-dependent HSV replication. rep neither killed the transfected host cells nor interfered with gene expression from the cotransfected amplification genes. This points to a specific interference with HSV-induced DNA amplification.  相似文献   

15.
The role of B cells and humoral immunity in herpes simplex virus (HSV) ocular infections was studied in immunoglobulin mu chain gene-targeted B-cell-deficient mice (muK/O). At doses of virus well tolerated by immunocompetent mice, heightened susceptibility of muK/O mice to herpetic encephalitis as well as to herpetic stromal keratitis (HSK) was observed. An explanation was sought for the increased severity of HSK in the muK/O mice. First, the lack of antibody responses in muK/O mice resulted in longer viral persistence and dissemination to the corneal stroma, the site of inflammation. Prolonged virus expression in the corneal stroma was suggested to cause bystander activation of Th1-type CD4(+) T cells, further contributing to the severity of HSK lesion expression in muK/O mice. Second, muK/O mice generated minimal Th2 cytokine responses compared to wild-type mice. Such responses might serve to downregulate the severity of Th1-mediated HSK lesions.  相似文献   

16.
The membrane phenotype of T cells involved in delayed hypersensitivity (DH), protective immunity, and suppression of delayed hypersensitivity to herpes simplex virus (HSV) has been determined. T cells from immune lymph nodes transferring DH and antiviral immunity to normal recipients were characterized as Lyt 1+2-. There appeared to be no detectable antiviral role for Lyt 1-2+ cells in the transferred cell suspension. Splenic T cells suppressing the induction of DH to HSV were characterized as being both Lyt 1+2- and Lyt 1-2+ 4 weeks after their induction. At earlier times, i.e., after 7 days, the suppression was mediated solely by the Lyt 1+2- population. Thereafter, a progressive increase in the contribution of the Lyt 1-2+ suppressor was observed. Both the early and later phases of suppression were due to I-J positive cells. The nature of the two suppressor cell types is discussed in relation to suppressor cell "cascades" and to the pathogenesis of herpes simplex virus infection.  相似文献   

17.
Human cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) clones directed against herpes simplex virus (HSV)-infected cells were generated after stimulation of peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) with HSV type 1 (HSV-1) and HSV type 2 (HSV-2). These CTL clones were studied with regard to HSV type specificity and with regard to whether they also express helper cell activity. Some clones, generated after stimulation with HSV-1, were cytotoxic for autologous cells infected with either HSV-1 or HSV-2 ("HSV type common clones"), whereas other clones lysed HSV-1-infected cells only ("type-specific clones"). Similarly, after HSV-2 stimulation, both HSV-2 specific and HSV type common clones were obtained, indicating the heterogeneity of human cytotoxic T cells to HSV. All CTL clones tested were found to be bifunctional in that they also proliferated in response to stimulation with HSV. The HSV type specificity of the proliferative response was identical to that of the cytotoxic activity of the clones. An HSV type common clone, when stimulated with either HSV-1 or HSV-2, and an HSV-1 specific clone, when stimulated with HSV-1 but not with HSV-2, produced a factor, presumably interleukin 2 (IL 2), which induced proliferation of CTLL, an IL 2-dependent T cell line, providing evidence that our HSV-directed CTL clones also express helper cell activity. CTL clones that we previously reported were restricted in cytotoxic activity by HLA class II DR-1 or MB-1 antigens were found, in this study, to be restricted in proliferative response to HSV by these same HLA antigens. These results suggest that our bifunctional T cell clones directed against HSV may recognize the same viral antigenic determinants and the same HLA antigens for both cytotoxic and virus-induced proliferative activities. This is the first demonstration of human HSV type specific and HSV type common T cell clones and HSV specific T cell clones with both cytotoxic and helper cell activities.  相似文献   

18.
One hundred thirteen HSV-specific CD4+ T cell clones were established from the PBL of a healthy person and their functional heterogeneity was investigated. All clones proliferated in response to stimulation with HSV in the presence of autologous APC. Among those, 48 clones showed cytotoxic activity to HSV-infected autologous EBV-transformed lymphoblastoid cell line, but not to HSV-infected autologous fibroblasts, HSV-infected allogeneic cells, or K562 cells (group 1). Five clones showed cytotoxicity against HSV-infected autologous cells as well as HSV-infected allogeneic cells and K562 cells (group 2). The cytotoxicity of these clones was found to be mediated by the direct killing but not by the "innocent bystander" killing of target cells. Sixty clones showed no cytotoxic activity, however, among these, 23 revealed HLA-unrestricted and nonspecific cytotoxicity in the presence of PHA in culture (group 3), and the remaining 37 did not show any cytotoxic activity even in the presence of PHA (group 4). The cytotoxic patterns of these clones did not change in activated and resting phases, suggesting that the difference in cytotoxic ability does not depend on cell cycles. The cytotoxic activity of group 1 was inhibited by addition of anti-HLA-DR or anti-CD3 mAb to the culture, whereas these mAb had no effect on the cytotoxicity of group 2. All four groups of clones had helper activity for anti-HSV antibody production by autologous B cells. Moreover it was found that all groups of clones simultaneously produced IL-2, IL-4, and IFN-gamma after culture with APC followed by HSV Ag stimulation. The surface phenotype of all clones was uniformly CD2+, CD3+, CD4+, CD8-, CD29+, CD45RA-, but expression of Leu 8 was varied. These data therefore indicate that HSV-specific human CD4+ T cells are classified into at least four groups according to the presence and specificity of cytotoxicity, i.e., Th cells with HSV-specific and HLA-class II-restricted cytotoxicity, Th cells with HLA-unrestricted and nonspecific cytotoxicity, Th cells with lectin-dependent cytotoxicity, and Th cells without cytotoxic activity. The present finding of functional heterogeneity among virus-specific human CD4+ T cells might shed light on the pathogenesis of CD4+ T cell immunodeficiency, such as human retrovirus infections.  相似文献   

19.
A function(s) involved in the altered susceptibility of herpes simplex virus type 2 (HSV-2)-infected cells to specific lysis by cytotoxic T lymphocytes was mapped in the S component of HSV-2 DNA by using HSV-1 X HSV-2 intertypic recombinants (RH1G44, RS1G25, R50BG10, A7D, and C4D) and HSV-1 MP. Target cells infected with R50BG10, A7D, and C4D exhibited reduced levels of cytolysis, as did HSV-2-infected cells, whereas RH1G44 and RS1G25 recombinant-infected and HSV-1 MP-infected cells showed levels of lysis equal to that of HSV-1 KOS-infected cells. The intertypic recombinants R50BG10, RS1G25, RH1G44, and HSV-1 MP induced cross-reactive cytotoxic T lymphocytes. Coinfection of cells with HSV-1 KOS and either HSV-2 186 or R50BG10 recombinant also resulted in a decrease in the level of specific lysis by anti-HSV cytotoxic T lymphocytes.  相似文献   

20.
We studied the cellular basis for the induction of Ts cells in anterior chamber (AC)-associated immune deviation (ACAID) by using TNP-modified syngeneic spleen cells (TNP-Spl). We demonstrate that the cells responsible for the induction of TNP-ACAID are non adherent, IA- T cells. This is in contrast to the antigen-presenting cells which induce suppression after the i.v. injection of TNP-Spl which are IA+/I-J+ adherent cells. Furthermore, two T cells within the TNP-Spl population are required to initiate suppression in TNP-ACAID: one is Lyt-1+, and I-J+, the other is Lyt-1+ and reactive with a monoclonal antibody, 14-30, which specifically identifies Ts inducer cells. The antigen specificity of ACAID resides in the 14-30+ T cell, and not the I-J+ cell. Although both cells must be viable to induce suppression, neither they (nor their products) must be in direct contact within the eye; one population may be in the right AC, the other in the left. Our results suggest that it is Ts inducer cells placed into the AC of the eye which initiate TNP-ACAID, and that these cells exit (or secrete Ts factors which exit) the eye to induce Ts effector cells in the spleen.  相似文献   

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