Virology
Volume 288, Issue 1, 15 September 2001, Pages 8-17
William G. Glass, Michael T. Liu, William A. Kuziel, and Thomas E. Lane
Abstract
Studies were performed to investigate the contributions of the CC chemokine receptor CCR5 in host defense and disease development following intracranial infection with mouse hepatitis virus (MHV). T cell recruitment was impaired in MHV-infected CCR5−/− mice at day 7 postinfection (pi), which correlated with increased (P ≤ 0.03) titers within the brain. However, by day 12 pi, T cell infiltration into the CNS of infected CCR5−/− and CCR5+/+ mice was similar and both strains exhibited comparable viral titers, indicating that CCR5 expression is not essential for host defense. Following MHV infection of CCR5+/+ mice, greater than 50% of cells expressing CCR5 antigen were activated macrophage/microglia (determined by F4/80 antigen expression). In addition, infected CCR5−/− mice exhibited reduced (P ≤ 0.02) macrophage (CD45highF4/80+) infiltration, which correlated with a significant reduction (P ≤ 0.001) in the severity of demyelination compared to CCR5+/+ mice. These data indicate that CCR5 contributes to MHV-induced demyelination by allowing macrophages to traffic into the CNS.
Keywords
chemokine, chemokine receptor, demyelination, multiple sclerosis, macrophage, neuroimmunology