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    J Infect Dis. 2002 Jul 1;186(1):8-14. Epub 2002 Jun 14.

    Differential expression of proinflammatory cytokine genes in vivo in response to pathogenic and nonpathogenic pneumovirus infections.

    Source

    Department of Pediatrics, State University of New York Upstate Medical University, Syracuse, NY 13210, USA. domachoj@upstate.edu

    Abstract

    Pneumonia virus of mice (PVM; Paramyxoviridae, subfamily Pneumovirinae) is an important pathogen for the study of physiologically relevant acute inflammatory responses in rodent hosts. In contrast to the severe symptomatology observed in response to infection with PVM strain J3666, infection with strain 15 resulted in few clinical symptoms, limited cellular inflammatory response, and no production of macrophage inflammatory protein-1alpha or monocyte chemoattractant peptide (MCP)-1. Microarray analysis of transcripts from lung tissue indicates that PVM J3666 infection promotes up-regulation of specific proinflammatory genes, most notably interferon (IFN)-1beta, IFN response genes, and chemokines MCP-1, MCP-3, RANTES (regulated on activation, normally T cell-expressed and secreted), and eotaxin. Of these, only RANTES expression increased in response to infection with strain 15, with no increased expression of IFN or IFN response genes, despite ongoing viral replication. These results suggest that pneumovirus replication alone is insufficient to promote antiviral inflammation and that evaluation of the more divergent strain-specific pneumovirus proteins may provide some intriguing leads toward the molecular basis of this differential response.

    PMID:
    12089656
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
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