Abstract

The immunosuppressive drug cyclophosphamide was used to study the effect of immunosuppression on the degree of chronic lactic dehydrogenase virus (LDV) viremia in mice. Weekly injections of cyclophosphamide caused an increase of LDV viremia of ca. 2.5 log(10) 50% infectious doses per ml as compared to the viremia in the nontreated mice. This increase occurred at about the same time that the formation of antibody with a neutralization index of 2 to 3 log(10) per ml could be demonstrated in the serum of control mice, whereas both neutralizing antibody and sensitized (antibody-bound but infectious) virus were absent in the immunosuppressed mice. In one experiment, antibody did not reappear 28 weeks after a 24-week course of cyclophosphamide treatment. In another experiment in which the drug was given for 12 weeks, antibody appeared again in the treated mice 14 weeks after cessation of drug administration and was accompanied by a decrease in viremia. The normal decrease of early viremia during the first 2 weeks of infection in immunosuppressed mice suggests that the immune response is not the cause of this initial decrease in LDV viremia but that interferon and perhaps other nonimmune factors may be involved here. The increased viremia in the immunosuppressed mice during the later stages of infection indicates that the immune response plays an important role in partial control of chronic viremia. The quantitative correlation between the decrease in neutralizing antibody and the increase in viremia in immunosuppressed mice suggests that antibody rather than cellular immunity may be the more important immune factor in the control of chronic viremia.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call