Abstract

The influence of the murine MHC gene complex H-2 class I alleles or of the genetic background and the role of virus variants on establishment of a persistent infection with lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) was analyzed in immunocompetent mice of H-2d haplotype by evaluation of cytotoxic T cell responses. Susceptibility to establishment of a virus carrier state increased in various H-2d mice with lower CTL response and slower CTL kinetics. Low responder BALB/c-H-2dm2, lacking H-2Ld molecules to present the major T cell epitope amino acids 118-126 of the LCMV nucleoprotein or DBA/2 mice possessing relatively few CD8+ T cells, were more susceptible than high responder BALB/c mice expressing H-2Ld. Additional critical factors were LCMV isolate and dose of infection. The rapidly replicating LCMV-DOCILE and Cl 13 Armstrong induced viral persistence readily, whereas the slowly replicating parental virus strains WE or Armstrong did not. The presented findings illustrate a model of MHC-linked or MHC-unlinked susceptibility for virus persistence and may help to explain pathogeneses of chronic virus infections in humans that are often associated with slowly progressing immunopathology.

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