Abstract
Intravaginal inoculation of cats with feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV) results in acute systemic infection accompanied by a strong CD8+ immune response that inhibits viral replication. CD8+ anti-FIV activity, revealed by increased FIV replication in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) depleted of CD8+ lymphocytes, was detected by 6 weeks after inoculation and correlated with reduced PBMC-associated virus at 12, 16, and 32 weeks after inoculation. Some cats with strong CD8+ anti-FIV activity during acute infection did not seroconvert and yielded no evidence of FIV infection at later times. These data suggest that CD8+ immunity may play a major role in eliminating virus during primary transmucosal FIV infection and may down-regulate viral replication during asymptomatic infection.
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