Publication | Open Access
Vaccination with a live retrovirus: the nature of the protective immune response.
46
Citations
25
References
1990
Year
ImmunologyImmunologic MechanismInterferon AlphaImmunotherapyLive VirusProtective Immune ResponseLive RetrovirusImmunological MemoryVaccinologyVaccine DevelopmentVaccine TestingVirologyAutoimmunityT Cell ImmunityVirus ChallengeVaccinationAntiviral ResponseAntiviral TherapyVaccine DesignMedicineVaccine ResearchViral Immunity
We tested 3'-azido-3'-deoxythymidine (zidovudine) combined with interferon alpha as chemoprophylaxis after exposing mice to Rauscher murine leukemia virus. Therapy started 4 hr after inoculation and administered for 20 days prevented viremia and disease in all 234 mice tested. When the animals were rechallenged with live virus after cessation of therapy, 96% were resistant. The nature of this protective immune response was analyzed: Passive serotherapy of naive mice challenged subsequently with Rauscher murine leukemia virus was only protective at a high dose of immune serum. Immune, but not naive, T cells alone were fully protective against virus challenge. We conclude that vaccination with a live retrovirus that cannot replicate because of pharmacological blockade induces a T-cell response capable of protecting against a lethal retrovirus-induced disease.
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