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Role of T-cell function in recovery from murine influenza infection.
Authors:K L Yap  T J Braciale  G L Ada
Institution:Department of Microbiology, John Curtin School of Medical Research, Australian National University, Canberra, A.C.T., Australia
Abstract:Athymic (nude) mice and their normal littermates were intranasally inoculated with graded doses of A/WSN influenza virus. At a dose of 103 EID50, all mice survived the infection. In contrast, at a dose of 5 × 104 EID50, all mice died by 7 days. At intermediate doses of 5 × 103 and 104 EID50, the nude mice were less resistant to the infection than their normal littermates, so that a higher proportion always died. Given a dose of 5 × 103 EID50, lung virus levels in both groups reached similar high levels by Day 5. Thereafter, virus levels in the normal mice rapidly fell so that no infectious virus could be detected by Day 18. In nude mice, the levels fell very slowly so that relatively high levels were still present at Day 18 in the surviving mice. At the height of the infection, high levels of cytotoxic T-cell activity was detected in the lungs of normal but not nude mice. Transfer to the nude mice of specific immune T cells raised from infected normal littermates enhanced survival of the nude mice and reduced the lung virus levels. Nude mice consistently showed a greater degree of lung consolidation than their normal littermates. Microscopically, the nude mouse lungs showed greater respiratory epithelial hyperplasia with minimal inflammatory cell infiltration in the foci of consolidation compared with their infected normal littermates. Under the conditions of these experiments, influenza-immune T cells seemed to inhibit rather than contribute to the generation of virus-mediated pulmonary pathology. The findings strongly suggest that T cells play an important positive role in the process of recovery from murine influenza infection.
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