ADMINISTRATION OF ANTI-IFN-GAMMA ANTIBODY TO BETA(2)-MICROGLOBULIN-DEFICIENT MICE DELAYS INFLUENZA-VIRUS CLEARANCE BUT DOES NOT SWITCH THE RESPONSE TO A T-HELPER CELL-2 PHENOTYPE
Sr. Sarawar et al., ADMINISTRATION OF ANTI-IFN-GAMMA ANTIBODY TO BETA(2)-MICROGLOBULIN-DEFICIENT MICE DELAYS INFLUENZA-VIRUS CLEARANCE BUT DOES NOT SWITCH THE RESPONSE TO A T-HELPER CELL-2 PHENOTYPE, The Journal of immunology, 153(3), 1994, pp. 1246-1253
Treatment of mice that were homozygous for a beta(2)-microglobulin gen
e disruption with a mAb that was specific for IFN-gamma delayed cleara
nce of an influenza A virus from the respiratory tract for at least 3
days, whereas administration of an anti-IL-4 mAb had no effect. Howeve
r, all mice survived and eventually cleared the virus. The anti-IFN-ga
mma significantly decreased both the level of class II MHC glycoprotei
n expression and the numbers of CD4(+) lymphocytes in the inflammatory
populations recovered by bronchoalveolar lavage of the pneumonic lung
, whereas the total cell counts remained the same. These differences w
ere not apparent for the regional mediastinal lymph nodes, although th
e frequency of lymph node B cells producing virus-specific Ab of the I
gG2a subclass was greatly reduced. However, neither the anti-IFN-gamma
nor anti-IL-4 treatments drastically altered the cytokine production
profiles detected for freshly isolated lymphocytes by the using single
cell ELISPOT assay or by ELISA of culture supernatants after in vitro
restimulation with virus. Thus, neutralization of secreted IFN-gamma
during the course of an influenza-specific response in beta(2)-microgl
obulin-deficient mice that lack CD8(+) T cells delays virus clearance
and modifies the character of the host response, but does not cause th
e CD4(+) subset to switch to a Th2 cytokine profile.