Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5544949 | The Veterinary Journal | 2016 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
Histopathological changes were severe in the olfactory bulbs (Obs), hippocampus, piriform, frontal, temporal and parietal cortices/lobes and were characterized by inflammatory infiltrates in Virchow-Robin spaces. The histopathological changes correlated positively with the distribution of BHV5 antigens (râ=â0.947; Pâ<â0.005). Cells of CD3+ phenotype were predominant in areas with severe perivascular cuffs. Viral antigens and genomic viral DNA were detected in the Obs and piriform lobe, simultaneously (râ=â0.987; Pâ<â0.005). Similarly, pro-inflammatory cytokine genes INFG, IL2, TNF and LTBR were expressed in the same brain areas (Pâ<â0.005). These results provide important information on the inflammatory and immunological events accompanying BHV5 neurological infections. Our findings provide the first evidence for increased immune activation followed by inflammatory cytokine expression, positively correlated with viral replication in the cranial areas of the brain. Taken together, these results suggest that the host immune response and inflammation play a crucial role in the pathogenesis of acute encephalitis by BHV5 in cattle.
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Authors
T.C. Cardoso, H.L. Ferreira, L.H. Okamura, T.P. Giroto, B.R.S.M. Oliveira, C.U.F. Fabri, R. Gameiro, E.F. Flores,