1. Murine Norovirus Infection Induces T H 1 Inflammatory Responses to Dietary Antigens.
- Author
-
Bouziat R, Biering SB, Kouame E, Sangani KA, Kang S, Ernest JD, Varma M, Brown JJ, Urbanek K, Dermody TS, Ng A, Hinterleitner R, Hwang S, and Jabri B
- Subjects
- Administration, Oral, Animals, Caliciviridae Infections virology, Capsid Proteins immunology, Celiac Disease immunology, Disease Models, Animal, Female, HEK293 Cells, Humans, Immunity, Inflammation, Interferon Regulatory Factor-1 immunology, Lymph Nodes, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Ovalbumin administration & dosage, Virus Shedding, Caliciviridae Infections immunology, Diet, Norovirus immunology, Norovirus pathogenicity, Ovalbumin immunology, Th1 Cells immunology
- Abstract
Intestinal reovirus infection can trigger T helper 1 (T
H 1) immunity to dietary antigen, raising the question of whether other viruses can have a similar impact. Here we show that the acute CW3 strain of murine norovirus, but not the persistent CR6 strain, induces TH 1 immunity to dietary antigen. This property of CW3 is dependent on its major capsid protein, a virulence determinant. Transcriptional profiling of mesenteric lymph nodes following infection reveals an immunopathological signature that does not segregate with protective immunity but with loss of oral tolerance, in which interferon regulatory factor 1 is critical. These data show that viral capacity to trigger specific inflammatory pathways at sites where T cell responses to dietary antigens take place interferes with the development of tolerance to an oral antigen. Collectively, these data provide a foundation for the development of therapeutic strategies to prevent TH 1-mediated complex immune disorders triggered by viral infections., (Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF