Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3414995 Microbes and Infection 2011 15 Pages PDF
Abstract

Respiratory viral infections result in severe pulmonary injury, to which host immune response may be a significant contributor. At present, it is not entirely clear the extent to which lung injury is a necessary consequence of host defense. In this report, we use functional genomics approach to characterize the key roles of cellular immunity and immune-inflammatory response in the immunopathology of Sendai virus infection in resistant C57BL/6J and susceptible DBA/2J mice. Infected mice manifested an immune-inflammatory response characterized by the pulmonary influx of neutrophils and mononuclear cells. DBA/2J mice mounted a vigorous immune response, with significant up-regulation of cytokine/chemokine genes in two successive waves through the course of infection. Whereas, C57BL/6J mice displayed an efficient immune response with less severe pathology and clusters of immune-inflammatory responsive genes were exclusively up-regulated on day 4 in this strain. Overall, DBA/2J mice exhibited a dysregulated hyper-inflammatory cytokine/chemokine cascades that does not limit viral spread resulting in a predisposition to severe lung pathology. This response is similar to severe human respiratory paramyxovirus infections, which will serve as a model for the elucidation of hyper-immune inflammatory response that result to severe immunopathology in respiratory viral infections.

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