| Literature DB >> 7835918 |
M W Douglas1, A M Kesson, N J King.
Abstract
Confluent and non-confluent mouse embryo fibroblast (CMEF and NCMEF) monolayers were infected with West Nile virus (WNV) for 24 hr, and class I major histocompatibility complex antigen (MHC-I) concentrations measured by flow cytometry (FCM). Concentrations on CMEF increased significantly more than on NCMEF. This was not owing to differences in interferon-beta (IFN-beta)-mediated MHC induction, as the IFN-beta quantity secreted by each infected fibroblast was similar in each culture, and IFN-beta-mediated MHC-I induction on NCMEF was greater than on CMEF. Furthermore, despite neutralization of WNV-induced supernatant IFN-beta, CMEF increased MHC-I expression significantly more than NCMEF. Functionally, WNV-infected CMEF were lysed 10-fold better by WNV-specific and allospecific cytotoxic T cells, than infected NCMEF. FCM demonstrated 76% CMEF and 68% NCMEF distributed in G0/G1. This represented G0 in CMEF, and G1 in NCMEF, confirmed by ribonucleotide reductase M1 subunit labelling, where only 20% CMEF was labelled, compared to 84% NCMEF. The possible implications for antiviral immune responses are discussed.Entities:
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Year: 1994 PMID: 7835918 PMCID: PMC1414906
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Immunology ISSN: 0019-2805 Impact factor: 7.397