Abstract

Mice persistently infected with lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) exhibit impaired learning ability. In this report, we determined whether clearance of the virus was associated with restoration of behavioral function. Neonatal Balb/cByJ mice were persistently infected with LCMV and tested as adults in a nonconditional spatial discrimination task. The presence of viral proteins in neurons was confirmed immunohistochemically and infectious virus was quantified in the blood by plaque assay. LCMV-infected adult mice made more errors in a Y-maze avoidance task compared to sham-inoculated controls. After the initial behavioral analysis, infected and control mice received a dose of cytotoxic T-lymphocytes sufficient to clear virus from these mice. Following complete clearance of the virus, mice were re-tested in the behavioral task, 5 months after the original test. No reversal of the learning deficit was seen following viral clearance; mice that had been cleared of the virus and those that remained persistently infected behaved similarly. These data indicate that persistent LCMV infection of the CNS lasting up to 7 months results in discriminated learning impairments that are not reversed by subsequent anti-viral immunocytotherapy.

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