EVIDENCE FOR BOVINE LEUKEMIA-VIRUS IN MAMMARY EPITHELIAL-CELLS OF INFECTED COWS

Citation
Gc. Buehring et al., EVIDENCE FOR BOVINE LEUKEMIA-VIRUS IN MAMMARY EPITHELIAL-CELLS OF INFECTED COWS, Laboratory investigation, 71(3), 1994, pp. 359-365
Citations number
32
Categorie Soggetti
Pathology,"Medicine, Research & Experimental
Journal title
ISSN journal
00236837
Volume
71
Issue
3
Year of publication
1994
Pages
359 - 365
Database
ISI
SICI code
0023-6837(1994)71:3<359:EFBLIM>2.0.ZU;2-R
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Bovine leukemia virus (BLV), a retrovirus, usually causes a subclinical infection of dairy and beef cattle, but in <1% of infect ed cattle a B cell lymphoma may develop after several years of infecti on. BLV is transmitted horizontally among cattle, and infected animals have anti-BLV titers. Expression of BLV antigen, however, is silent i n peripheral blood lymphocytes in vivo. The tropism of BLV has been as sumed to be limited to B lymphocytes, because no other cell type has b een found to harbor the virus in vivo. Since retrovirus-like particles had been identified in milk, and infection can be transmitted by milk , we decided to investigate whether BLV was in mammary epithelial cell s.EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: Pure cultures of mammary epithelial cells were established from cells shed into the milk of 28 cows. BLV was searched in these cultures by immunocytochemistry and the polymerase chain rea ction, the specificity of the latter confirmed by Southern blot hybrid ization and DNA sequencing. BLV was searched immunocytochemically in m ammary tissue sections from 12 cows. RESULTS: Antigenic and/or molecul ar evidence of BLV was found in the cultured cells of 20 cows. Antigen ic evidence of BLV was found in tissue sections from 10 cows, indicati ng virus expression in vivo. Simultaneous detection of BLVp24 and cyto keratins, localized antigen expression to the mammary epithelial cells . CONCLUSIONS: These indications of BLV in mammary epithelial cells in vivo suggest that BLV is capable of infecting and expressing antigen in glandular epithelium in vivo and has a broader tissue tropism than was previously thought. They raise the question of how persistent mamm ary infection by BLV may influence the course of bovine lymphoma, and what effect the virus may have on the mammary gland.