Literature DB >> 11600246

Susceptibility of thermally injured mice to cytomegalovirus infection.

H Kobayashi1, M Kobayashi, D N Herndon, R B Pollard, F Suzuki.   

Abstract

Thermally injured patients are very susceptible to infection with cytomegaloviruses. In this study a role of burn-associated type 2 T cell responses on the cytomegalovirus infection was examined in a mouse model of thermal injury. A predominance of type 2 T cell responses in splenic lymphocytes of thermally injured mice has been previously demonstrated. SCID mice inoculated with splenic T cells from thermally injured mice were susceptible to infection with a small amount (5 PFU/mouse) of murine cytomegalovirus (MCMV). Conversely, SCID mice inoculated with splenic T cells from normal mice were resistant to the same infection. High levels of IL-4 and IL-10, but not IFN-gamma and IL-2, were detected in sera of thermally injured mice (TI-mice) infected with MCMV when those were compared with sera of normal mice infected with MCMV. IL-4 and IL-10 (type 2 cytokines) were produced by splenic T cells from MCMV-infected TI-mice, when they were stimulated in vitro with anti-CD3 mAb. Type 1 cytokines (IFN-gamma and IL-2), however, were not produced by these T cells after the same stimulation. In contrast, splenic T cells from MCMV-infected normal mice produced type 1 cytokines by the stimulation with anti-CD3 mAb. These results suggest that the susceptibility of mice to MCMV infection is markedly influenced by burn-associated type 2 T cell responses.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11600246     DOI: 10.1016/s0305-4179(01)00028-6

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Burns        ISSN: 0305-4179            Impact factor:   2.744


  3 in total

1.  The P50 Research Center in Perioperative Sciences: How the investment by the National Institute of General Medical Sciences in team science has reduced postburn mortality.

Authors:  Celeste C Finnerty; Karel D Capek; Charles Voigt; Gabriel Hundeshagen; Janos Cambiaso-Daniel; Craig Porter; Linda E Sousse; Amina El Ayadi; Ramon Zapata-Sirvent; Ashley N Guillory; Oscar E Suman; David N Herndon
Journal:  J Trauma Acute Care Surg       Date:  2017-09       Impact factor: 3.313

2.  Human cytomegalovirus infection of a severe-burn patient: evidence for productive self-limited viral replication in blood and lung.

Authors:  Klaus Hamprecht; Mathias Pfau; Hans-Eberhard Schaller; Gerhard Jahn; Jaap M Middeldorp; Hans-Oliver Rennekampff
Journal:  J Clin Microbiol       Date:  2005-05       Impact factor: 5.948

3.  Inhalative IL-10 attenuates pulmonary inflammation following hemorrhagic shock without major alterations of the systemic inflammatory response.

Authors:  Philipp Kobbe; Philipp Lichte; Helen Schreiber; Lucy Kathleen Reiss; Stefan Uhlig; Hans-Christoph Pape; Roman Pfeifer
Journal:  Mediators Inflamm       Date:  2011-10-20       Impact factor: 4.711

  3 in total

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