| Literature DB >> 17881509 |
Matteo Iannacone1, Giovanni Sitia, Iñigo Narvaiza, Zaverio M Ruggeri, Luca G Guidotti.
Abstract
Treatment with a low dose of combined aspirin and clopidogrel, two antiplatelet drugs widely used in humans, markedly reduced the homing of virus-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes and virus-nonspecific inflammatory leukocytes to the liver of mice acutely infected with a hepatotropic, replication-deficient, lacZ-expressing adenovirus (RAd35). Consequently, aspirin/clopidogrel-induced platelet dysfunction greatly diminished liver disease severity and inhibited viral clearance. Along with the finding that aspirin/clopidogrel caused neither bleeding nor anemia, our results suggest that antiplatelet drugs may be considered to limit excessive liver immunopathology and/or to facilitate the persistence of hepatotropic viral vectors utilized in gene therapy.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17881509 PMCID: PMC2168169 DOI: 10.1128/CVI.00298-07
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Vaccine Immunol ISSN: 1556-679X