Modulation of immune cell populations and activation markers in the pathogenesis of African swine fever virus infection

African swine fever (ASF) virus induces immune cell alterations that may be detected by changes in peripheral blood cells phenotypic antigens and activation markers which were examined by flow cytometry, analyzing both cell proportion and/or expression intensity of superficial antigens. These studies were conducted in pigs with experimental acute or chronic ASF infection to determine whether changes among important surface activation markers and phenotypic antigens, and their correlative lymph node status, reflected similar or disparate aspects of immune pathology. In acute infection produced by virulent viruses, macrophage and B lymphocyte populations decreased in peripheral blood after a short activation period at the beginning of the infection. A significative decrease of interleukin 2 receptor (IL 2R) expression was also observed in those pigs. These variations correlated with lymph node cell depletion due to an intense lymphoid cell death by apoptosis, affecting mainly the B lymphocyte subpopulation as determined by immunohistochemistry. Nevertheless, pigs infected with an attenuated isolate undergoing chronic persistent infection, presented a distinct pattern of modification, according with a different clinicopathological evolution. Changes consisted in systemic immune activation coincident with the highest viremra titer, with an augmentation in CD8+ T lymphocyte, macrophage, and B cell populations, and MHC (major histocompatibility complex) antigens. Percentage elevation of circulating immune subpopulations was accompanied by cell accumulation with lymphoid hyperplasia but a conserved distribution of B lymphocytes in lymphoid organs of chronically infected pigs.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ramiro-Ibáñez, F., Ortega, A., Ruiz-Gonzalvo, F., Escribano, J. M., Alonso, C.
Format: journal article biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: 1997
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12792/3645
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Summary:African swine fever (ASF) virus induces immune cell alterations that may be detected by changes in peripheral blood cells phenotypic antigens and activation markers which were examined by flow cytometry, analyzing both cell proportion and/or expression intensity of superficial antigens. These studies were conducted in pigs with experimental acute or chronic ASF infection to determine whether changes among important surface activation markers and phenotypic antigens, and their correlative lymph node status, reflected similar or disparate aspects of immune pathology. In acute infection produced by virulent viruses, macrophage and B lymphocyte populations decreased in peripheral blood after a short activation period at the beginning of the infection. A significative decrease of interleukin 2 receptor (IL 2R) expression was also observed in those pigs. These variations correlated with lymph node cell depletion due to an intense lymphoid cell death by apoptosis, affecting mainly the B lymphocyte subpopulation as determined by immunohistochemistry. Nevertheless, pigs infected with an attenuated isolate undergoing chronic persistent infection, presented a distinct pattern of modification, according with a different clinicopathological evolution. Changes consisted in systemic immune activation coincident with the highest viremra titer, with an augmentation in CD8+ T lymphocyte, macrophage, and B cell populations, and MHC (major histocompatibility complex) antigens. Percentage elevation of circulating immune subpopulations was accompanied by cell accumulation with lymphoid hyperplasia but a conserved distribution of B lymphocytes in lymphoid organs of chronically infected pigs.