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  4. Antiviral Defense in Mice Lacking Both Alpha/Beta and Gamma-Interferon Receptors
 
research article

Antiviral Defense in Mice Lacking Both Alpha/Beta and Gamma-Interferon Receptors

Vandenbroek, M. F.
•
Muller, U.
•
Huang, S.
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1995
Journal of Virology

Alpha/beta interferon (IFN) and gamma IFN exert widely overlapping biological effects. Still, mice with individually inactivated alpha/beta or gamma receptors exhibit variably severely reduced resistance to infection and altered immune responses. To investigate to what extent the two IFN systems are functionally redundant, we generated mice with a combined receptor defect (AG129 mice), Like mice with individual mutations, AG129 mice had no apparent anomalies, confirming that in the mouse the IFN system is not essential for normal development. These mice showed an additive phenotype with respect to antiviral defense and exhibited an increased susceptibility to lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) and notably vaccinia virus infection, Because of unlimited replication and subsequent rapid exhaustion of cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) precursors, these mice were unable to mount a CTL response to LCMV. CDSC-mediated immunopathology was absent in LCMV-infected mice, and virus persisted, Vaccinia virus replicated much faster in AG129 mice, and a 10(4)-fold lower dose of vaccinia virus was sufficient to prime these mice, With the normal priming dose of 10(6) PFU, cytopathic effects and overwhelming infection possibly causing partial exhaustion of CTL interfered with the anti-vaccinia virus response. Even though global antiviral immunoglobulin G (IgG) titers were within normal ranges, the IgG subclass distribution was heavily biased toward IgG1.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1128/jvi.69.8.4792-4796.1995
Author(s)
Vandenbroek, M. F.
Muller, U.
Huang, S.
Aguet, M.  
Zinkernagel, R. M.
Date Issued

1995

Published in
Journal of Virology
Volume

69

Issue

8

Start page

4792

End page

4796

Note

Vandenbroek, M. F. Univ Zurich,Inst Exptl Immunol,Schmelzbergstr 12,Ch-8091 Zurich,Switzerland Univ Zurich,Inst Molec Biol 1,Ch-8091 Zurich,Switzerland Genentech Inc,S San Francisco,Ca 94080

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

OTHER

EPFL units
UPAGU  
Available on Infoscience
December 12, 2007
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/15468
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