Abstract

Sheep-associated malignant catarrhal fever (SA-MCF) caused by ovine herpesvirus-2 (OvHV-2), a γ-herpesvirus in the Macavirus genus, is a fatal disease associated with lymphoproliferation, lymphocytic vasculitis, and mucosal ulceration in clinically susceptible species. SA-MCF is an important threat to American bison ( Bison bison) due to their high susceptibility to this disease. Currently, the pathogenesis of disease in SA-MCF is poorly understood, and the immunophenotype of lymphocytes that infiltrate the vascular lesions of bison and cattle with SA-MCF has been only partially defined. Previous single-color immunohistochemistry studies have demonstrated that CD8 + cells and CD4 + cells predominate within vascular infiltrates in cattle and bison. The CD8 + cells detected in the vascular lesions of cattle and bison were assumed to be cytotoxic αβ T lymphocytes. However, polychromatic immunophenotyping analyses in this study showed that CD8 +/perforin + γδ T cells, CD4 +/perforin − αβ T cells, and B cells infiltrate vascular lesions in the urinary bladder, kidney, and liver of six bison with experimentally-induced SA-MCF. CD8 + αβ T cells and WC1 + γδ T cell cells were only infrequently and inconsistently identified. This study confirmed our hypothesis that the predominant CD8 + lymphocytes infiltrating the vascular lesions of bison with SA-MCF are cytotoxic lymphocytes of the innate immune system, not CD8 + αβ T cells. Results of the present study support the previous suggestions that MCF is fundamentally a disease of immune dysregulation.

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