| Literature DB >> 26483473 |
Kristy M Bialas1, Takayuki Tanaka2, Dollnovan Tran3, Valerie Varner2, Eduardo Cisneros De La Rosa1, Flavia Chiuppesi4, Felix Wussow4, Lisa Kattenhorn2, Sheila Macri2, Erika L Kunz1, Judy A Estroff5, Jennifer Kirchherr1, Yujuan Yue6, Qihua Fan1, Michael Lauck7, David H O'Connor8, Allison H S Hall9, Alvarez Xavier10, Don J Diamond4, Peter A Barry6, Amitinder Kaur11, Sallie R Permar12.
Abstract
Elucidation of maternal immune correlates of protection against congenital cytomegalovirus (CMV) is necessary to inform future vaccine design. Here, we present a novel rhesus macaque model of placental rhesus CMV (rhCMV) transmission and use it to dissect determinants of protection against congenital transmission following primary maternal rhCMV infection. In this model, asymptomatic intrauterine infection was observed following i.v. rhCMV inoculation during the early second trimester in two of three rhCMV-seronegative pregnant females. In contrast, fetal loss or infant CMV-associated sequelae occurred in four rhCMV-seronegative pregnant macaques that were CD4(+) T-cell depleted at the time of inoculation. Animals that received the CD4(+) T-cell-depleting antibody also exhibited higher plasma and amniotic fluid viral loads, dampened virus-specific CD8(+) T-cell responses, and delayed production of autologous neutralizing antibodies compared with immunocompetent monkeys. Thus, maternal CD4(+) T-cell immunity during primary rhCMV infection is important for controlling maternal viremia and inducing protective immune responses that prevent severe CMV-associated fetal disease.Entities:
Keywords: T-cell immunity; congenital cytomegalovirus; neutralizing antibody; rhesus CMV; rhesus model
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26483473 PMCID: PMC4640765 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1511526112
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205