Specific remodeling of splenic architecture by cytomegalovirus

被引:83
作者
Benedict, Chris A. [1 ]
De Trez, Carl [1 ]
Schneider, Kirsten [1 ]
Ha, Sukwon [1 ]
Patterson, Ginelle [1 ]
Ware, Carl F. [1 ]
机构
[1] La Jolla Inst Allergy & Immunol, Div Mol Immunol, San Diego, CA USA
关键词
D O I
10.1371/journal.ppat.0020016
中图分类号
Q93 [微生物学];
学科分类号
071005 ; 100705 ;
摘要
Efficient immune defenses are facilitated by the organized microarchitecture of lymphoid organs, and this organization is regulated by the compartmentalized expression of lymphoid tissue chemokines. Mouse cytomegalovirus ( MCMV) infection induces significant remodeling of splenic microarchitecture, including loss of marginal zone macrophage populations and dissolution of T and B cell compartmentalization. MCMV preferentially infected the splenic stroma, targeting endothelial cells (EC) as revealed using MCMV-expressing green fluorescent protein. MCMV infection caused a specific, but transient transcriptional suppression of secondary lymphoid chemokine (CCL21). The loss of CCL21 was associated with the failure of T lymphocytes to locate within the T cell zone, although trafficking to the spleen was unaltered. Expression of CCL21 in lymphotoxin (LT)-alpha-deficient mice is dramatically reduced, however MCMV infection further reduced CCL21 levels, suggesting that viral modulation of CCL21 was independent of LTa signaling. Activation of LTb-receptor signaling with an agonistic antibody partially restored CCL21 mRNA expression and redirected transferred T cells to the splenic T cell zone in MCMV-infected mice. These results indicate that virus-induced alterations in lymphoid tissues can occur through an LT-independent modulation of chemokine transcription, and targeting of the LT cytokine system can counteract lymphoid tissue remodeling by MCMV.
引用
收藏
页码:164 / 174
页数:11
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