Abstract

We investigated the involvement of antibody in protection against vaginal herpes simplex virus type-2 (HSV-2) infection by comparing intact and B-cell knockout (KO) mice. Vaginal immunization of intact mice with attenuated HSV-2 markedly reduced an HSV-2 challenge infection in the vagina. In contrast, immunization of B-cell KO mice produced less immunity against the challenge infection and that immunity occurred in a different pattern. At 20 hr after challenge, immunostaining of virus proteins in the vaginal epithelium and shed virus protein titres in the vaginal secretions were not significantly different between immunized and non-immunized B-cell KO mice and were much greater than in immunized intact mice. At 48 hr after challenge, the vaginal infection in immunized B-cell KO mice was markedly less than at 20 hr but remained approximately sevenfold higher than in intact mice. This pattern of challenge infection in the vagina indicates that B cells, and probably the antibody derived from them, provided significant protection against reinfection in intact mice, especially during the first 20 hr after challenge, while other effector mechanisms became important between 20 and 48 hr after challenge. To determine whether T-cell immunity in immunized B-cell KO mice was equal to that in intact mice, we assessed interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) secretion by memory T cells in vivo in the vagina at 20 hr after challenge. We found no significant differences in the up-regulation of major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II antigens in the epithelium, up-regulation of vascular cell adhesion molecule-1 (VCAM-1) in vascular endothelium, or recruitment of T cells to the mucosa, indicating that the memory T-cell response to virus challenge was the same in intact and B-cell KO mice.

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