The progression of Junin virus infection was studied in congenitally athymic mice. Immunocompetent littermates were used as infected controls. As expected, the latter developed lethal encephalitis, with viremia and considerable viral replication in the brain. The mortality rate was almost 100%; the few surviving controls exhibited high serum neutralizing antibody levels and a total absence of virus in blood and brain. In contrast, nude mice did not contract the disease; all survived with persistent viremia and virus in brain, but no serum neutralizing antibodies were detected. These results confirm previous research on thymectomized mice and those treated with anti-lymphocyte serum and tend to support the important role of cellular immunity in the pathogenesis of this viral disease.
Splenocytes from Junin-virus-persistently-infected euthymic mice taken at 45 days postinfection seemed unable to induce overt signs of disease, to cause death, or to modify brain viral levels when transferred to athymic Junin-virus-infected mice. Findings differed sharply when the same recipients were transferred with splenocytes taken at 6 or 30 days postinfection from immunocompetent mice infected in adult life, since mortality reached 80 or 50%, respectively, and brain viral titers were significantly lowered. Furthermore, splenocytes taken at 6 days postinfection from whole adult mice proved harmless to persistently infected euthymic mice. These findings strongly suggest the existence of an immune system alteration in the immunocompetent mouse, attributable to Junin virus persistence. This premise is based on the fact that splenocytes from persistenly infected mice were unable to recognize viral antigen expressed on recipient-infected cells. The absence or impairment of a specific cytotoxic T cell population is hereby postulated.
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