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CCL5-CCR5 interaction provides antiapoptotic signals for macrophage survival during viral infection

Authors :
Tyner, Jeffrey W
Uchida, Osamu
Kajiwara, Naohiro
Kim, Edy Y
Patel, Anand C
O'Sullivan, Mary P
Walter, Michael J
Schwendener, Reto A
Cook, Donald N
Danoff, Theodore M
Holtzman, Michael J
Source :
Nature Medicine. Nov, 2005, Vol. 11 Issue 11, p1180, 8 p.
Publication Year :
2005

Abstract

Host defense against viruses probably depends on targeted death of infected host cells and then clearance of cellular corpses by macrophages. For this process to be effective, the macrophage must presumably avoid its own virus-induced death. Here we identify one such mechanism. We show that mice lacking the chemokine Ccl5 are immune compromised to the point of delayed viral clearance, excessive airway inflammation and respiratory death after mouse parainfluenza or human influenza virus infection. Virus-inducible levels of Ccl5 are required to prevent apoptosis of virus-infected mouse macrophages in vivo and mouse and human macrophages ex vivo. The protective effect of Ccl5 requires activation of the Ccr5 chemokine receptor and consequent bilateral activation of G[sub.[alpha]i]-PI3K-AKT and G[sub.[alpha]i]-MEK-ERK signaling pathways. The antiapoptotic action of chemokine signaling may therefore allow scavengers to finally stop the host cell-to-cell infectious process.<br />Author(s): Jeffrey W Tyner [1]; Osamu Uchida [1]; Naohiro Kajiwara [1]; Edy Y Kim [1]; Anand C Patel [2]; Mary P O'Sullivan [1]; Michael J Walter [1]; Reto A Schwendener [...]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10788956
Volume :
11
Issue :
11
Database :
Gale General OneFile
Journal :
Nature Medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsgcl.192625739
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/nm1303