Macrophages and age-dependent resistance to hepatitis induced by herpes simplex virus type 2 im mice.

AUTOR(ES)
RESUMO

An age-dependent increase in the resistance of BALB/c mice to induction of focal necrotic hepatitis by herpes simplex virus type 2 was demonstrated. In 3-week-old mice inoculated intraperitoneally with virus, numerous necrotic foci developed in the liver. As the mice matured, the number of lesions declined until the age of 8 weeks, when no further increase in resistance appeared. Corresponding to this, the virus titers of livers and spleens of 3-week-old mice were higher than in 8-week-old animals throughout the infection, and the infection was apparently terminated in these organs of the adult mice by day 5. In vitro infection of peritoneal macrophages from 3-week-old and 8-week-old mice showed that this age-related resistance was concomitant with an increased restriction of virus replication in peritoneal macrophages from adult mice. Since, furthermore, the resistance of adult mice could be abolished by intravenous inoculation of the macrophage-toxic agent silica before infection, and since adoptive transfer of 2 X 10(6) syngeneic macrophages from adult mice to young ones conferred to the latter a resistance comparable to that of the adult mice, it is concluded that macrophage maturation is responsible for the age-dependent resistance seen in this infection.

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