1. Antibody-mediated immune control of a retrovirus does not require the microbiota.
- Author
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Wilks J, Beilinson H, Theriault B, Chervonsky A, and Golovkina T
- Subjects
- Animals, Blotting, Western, Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay, Freund's Adjuvant, Germ-Free Life immunology, Mice, Mice, Inbred Strains, Microbiota immunology, Ovalbumin, Species Specificity, Specific Pathogen-Free Organisms, Antibodies, Neutralizing immunology, Immunity, Humoral immunology, Retroviridae Infections immunology
- Abstract
Commensal microbes are often required to control viral infection by facilitating host immune defenses. However, we found that this does not hold true for retroviral infection. We report that retrovirus-resistant mice control the pathogen with virus-neutralizing antibodies independently of commensal microbiota. This is in contrast to orthomyxoviruses and arenaviruses, where resistance is ablated in animals depleted of microbiota. Clearly, when it comes to antiviral immunity, the role of the microbiota cannot be generalized.
- Published
- 2014
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