Demonstration of the antiviral role of natural killer cells in vivo with a natural killer cell-specific monoclonal antibody (NK 1.1) |
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Authors: | R M Welsh P L Dundon E E Eynon J O Brubaker G C Koo C L O'Donnell |
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Affiliation: | Department of Pathology, University of Massachusetts Medical Center, Worcester. |
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Abstract: | A monoclonal antibody (NK 1.1) to mouse natural killer (NK) cells selectively depleted NK cell activity in virus-infected mice without significantly depressing other immune functions, including the development of virus-specific cytotoxic T cells. NK cell depletion with this antibody resulted in markedly enhanced plaque-forming unit titers of some (murine cytomegalo, Pichinde) but not other (mouse hepatitis, lymphocytic choriomeningitis) viruses. This confirms that NK cells do play a role in regulating certain infections and shows that this antibody provides a convenient tool for examining the role of NK cells in viral infections. |
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