Literature DB >> 23468500

Effects of postchallenge administration of ST-246 on dissemination of IHD-J-Luc vaccinia virus in normal mice and in immune-deficient mice reconstituted with T cells.

Marina Zaitseva1, Elisabeth Shotwell, John Scott, Stephanie Cruz, Lisa R King, Jody Manischewitz, Claudia G Diaz, Robert A Jordan, Douglas W Grosenbach, Hana Golding.   

Abstract

Whole-body bioimaging was used to study dissemination of vaccinia virus (VACV) in normal and in immune deficient (nu(-)/nu(-)) mice protected from lethality by postchallenge administration of ST-246. Total fluxes were recorded in the liver, spleen, lungs, and nasal cavities of live mice after intranasal infection with a recombinant IHD-J-Luc VACV expressing luciferase. Areas under the flux curve were calculated for individual mice to assess viral loads. Treatment for 2 to 5 days of normal BALB/c mice with ST-246 at 100 mg/kg starting 24 h postchallenge conferred 100% protection and reduced viral loads in four organs compared to control mice. Mice also survived after 5 days of treatment with ST-246 at 30 mg/kg, and yet the viral loads and poxes were higher in these mice compared to 100-mg/kg treatment group. Nude mice were not protected by ST-246 alone or by 10 million adoptively transferred T cells. In contrast, nude mice that received T cells and 7-day treatment with ST-246 survived infection and exhibited reduced viral loads compared to nonreconstituted and ST-246-treated mice after ST-246 was stopped. Similar protection of nude mice was achieved using adoptively transferred 1.0 and 0.1 million, but not 0.01 million, purified T cells or CD4(+) or CD8(+) T cells in conjunction with ST-246 treatment. These data suggest that ST-246 protects immunocompetent mice from lethality and reduces viral dissemination in internal organs and poxvirus lesions. Furthermore, immune-deficient animals with partial T cell reconstitution can control virus replication after a course of ST-246 and survive lethal vaccinia virus challenge.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23468500      PMCID: PMC3648177          DOI: 10.1128/JVI.03426-12

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Virol        ISSN: 0022-538X            Impact factor:   6.549


  30 in total

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