Abstract

Adult mice infected intracerebrally (i.c) with the Lansing strain of type 2 human poliovirus (HPV2) failed to develop a systemic neutralizing antibody response until 2 months post-infection (p.i). In contrast, an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) demonstrated an antibody response of IgM and IgG classes beginning at day 1 p.i. with peak levels reached by 5 weeks p.i. This response was slightly greater in paralyzed than in nonparalyzed animals. Immunoprecipitation of poliovirus proteins from cytoplasmic extracts and disrupted purified virion preparations revealed antibodies to three capsid proteins, two capsid precursor proteins, and one nonstructural protein. Finally, neither neutralizing antibody nor definite virus replication was detected after oral, intraperitoneal, or intravenous routes of inoculation. We conclude that the lack of a systemic neutralizing antibody response in mice is probably due to an insufficient amount of infectious virus and consequently viral neutralizing epitopes reaching extraneural lymphoid tissues

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