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Title: Overexpression of tumor necrosis factor alpha by a recombinant rabies virus attenuates replication in neurons and prevents lethal infection in mice. Author: Faber M, Bette M, Preuss MA, Pulmanausahakul R, Rehnelt J, Schnell MJ, Dietzschold B, Weihe E. Journal: J Virol; 2005 Dec; 79(24):15405-16. PubMed ID: 16306612. Abstract: The effect of tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) on rabies virus (RV) infection of the mouse central nervous system (CNS) was studied, using recombinant RV engineered to express either soluble TNF-alpha [SPBN-TNF-alpha+] or insoluble membrane-bound TNF-alpha [SPBN-TNF-alpha(MEM)]. Growth curves derived from infections of mouse neuroblastoma NA cells revealed significantly less spread and production of SPBN-TNF-alpha+ than of SPBN-TNF-alpha(MEM) or SPBN-TNF-alpha-, which carries an inactivated TNF-alpha gene. The expression of soluble or membrane-bound TNF-alpha was not associated with increased cell death or induction of alpha/beta interferons. Brains of mice infected intranasally with SPBN-TNF-alpha+ showed significantly less virus spread than did mouse brains after SPBN-TNF-alpha- infection, and none of the SPBN-TNF-alpha+-infected mice succumbed to RV infection, whereas 80% of SPBN-TNF-alpha- -infected mice died. Reduced virus spread in SPBN-TNF-alpha+-infected mouse brains was paralleled by enhanced CNS inflammation, including T-cell infiltration and microglial activation. These data suggest that TNF-alpha exerts its protective activity in the brain directly through an as yet unknown antiviral mechanism and indirectly through the induction of inflammatory processes in the CNS.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]