| Literature DB >> 14748066 |
Juan D Rodas1, Igor S Lukashevich, Juan C Zapata, Cristiana Cairo, Ilia Tikhonov, Mahmoud Djavani, C David Pauza, Maria S Salvato.
Abstract
Arenaviruses are transmitted from rodents to human beings by blood or mucosal exposure. The most devastating arenavirus in terms of human disease is Lassa fever virus, causing up to 300,000 annual infections in West Africa. We used a model for Lassa fever in which Rhesus macaques were infected with a related virus, lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV). Our goals were to determine the outcome of infection after mucosal inoculation and later lethal challenge, to characterize protective immune responses, and to test cross-protection between a virulent (LCMV-WE) and an avirulent (LCMV-ARM) strain of virus. Although intravenous infections in the monkey model were uniformly lethal, intragastric infections recapitulated the spectrum of clinical outcomes seen in human exposure to Lassa fever virus: death, recovery from disease, and most often, subclinical infection. Plaque neutralization, ELISA, lymphocyte proliferation, and chromium-release assays were used to monitor humoral and cellular immune responses. Cross protection between the two strains was observed. The three out of seven monkeys that experienced protection were also the three with the strongest cell-mediated immunity. Copyright 2004 Wiley-Liss, Inc.Entities:
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Year: 2004 PMID: 14748066 PMCID: PMC2562566 DOI: 10.1002/jmv.20000
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Virol ISSN: 0146-6615 Impact factor: 2.327