Abstract
An animal model was designed for use in studies of initial cellular immune responses to virus infection of the intestinal mucosa. The animal chosen was the New Zealand White rabbit and the mucosal site the subterminal ileum, isolated in a Thirty-Vella loop. The antigen used was parainfluenzavirus type 3, which would normally be destroyed by bile salts if ingested. Loops approximately 20 cm in length, each containing at least one Peyer's patch, were exteriorised through left paramedian stomata. Atrophic changes began to appear in the loops by 7 days, but no observable diminution in their associated lymphoid tissues was evident. The genesis of parainfluenzavirus type 3 infection in the loops was monitored by assay of sequential loop washings for infectious virus and in fluorescent antibody studies of cells from infected loop epithelia. Infectious virus was recovered for up to 13 days after inoculation and specific intracytoplasmic immunofluorescence was detected in loop epithelial cells. There was little serological evidence of systemic spread of the virus. A localised cellular immune response against parainfluenzavirus type 3 was mounted in the lymphoid tissues associated with the infected loops by day 14, but was not detected in systemic lymphoid tissues. No reactivity was detected in rabbits given inactivated virus via their loops or in those receiving infectious virus intravenously. This model appears to be capable of generating mucosal cellular responses to infection and may therefore be suitable for further studies in this field.
Published Version
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