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The JH2604 deletion variant of herpes simplex virus type 2 (HG52) fails to produce necrotizing encephalitis following intracranial inoculation of mice
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Citations
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References
1990
Year
Viral PathogenesisImmunologyMouse BrainsViral PersistenceIntracranial InoculationNeurologyNeuroimmunologyViral GeneticsJh2604 Deletion VariantNeurovirologyVirologyEncephalitisVirus AntigenMolecular VirologyPathogenesisAntiviral ResponseHerpesvirusesCentral Nervous SystemMedicineAnimal Virus
The pathological changes and distribution of virus antigen in mouse brains were studied following intracranial inoculation of 3 week old BALB/c mice with the herpes simplex virus (HSV) type 2 strain HG52 and its deletion variant JH2604. The variant JH2604 failed to produce necrotizing encephalitis compared to the parental HG52. The morphological changes induced in JH2604-infected brains consisted of localized perivascular cuffing by lymphocytes and infiltration by immune cells. Immunohistochemical studies using polyclonal anti-HSV serum showed that JH2604 antigens were localized at the site of inoculation with no evidence of neuronal involvement. Wild-type HSV- infected brains demonstrated a wide distribution of antigens both in neuronal and supporting cells. These data provide evidence that the non-neurovirulent phenotype of JH2604 is due to inability to replicate within neuronal cells of the central nervous system and pinpoints a precise role for the HG52 sequences contained within the 1488 bp subfragment of TRL/IRL deleted in JH2604.
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