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  • Title: The cytotoxic response to murine cytomegalovirus. III. Lymphokine release and cytotoxicity are dependent upon phenotypically similar immune cell populations.
    Author: Sinickas VG, Ashman RB, Hodgkin PD, Blanden RV.
    Journal: J Gen Virol; 1985 Dec; 66 ( Pt 12)():2551-61. PubMed ID: 2866228.
    Abstract:
    Murine cytomegalovirus (MCMV)-immune lymph node (LN) cells were generated following 4 days culture of draining popliteal LN cells removed after bilateral hind footpad inoculation of mice with 4 X 10(2) p.f.u. MCMV. This cell population expressed both cytotoxic activity against MCMV-infected mouse embryo fibroblasts (MEF) and the capacity to release lymphokine upon stimulation with MCMV-infected MEF. Cytotoxicity and lymphokine release were Class I, H-2-restricted, virus-specific and dependent upon Thy1. 2+, Lyt2+ cells. Mixing of 5 X 10(5) MCMV-immune T cells with an excess of syngeneic MCMV-infected MEF stimulators produced detectable levels of the lymphokine interleukin-3 by 1 h, with a maximum rate of its release between 1 and 6 h and plateau levels by 14 h. The capacity to stimulate virus-specific MCMV-immune T cells was acquired by MEF at 1 h after MCMV infection with maximum stimulator ability attained by 8 h. In the presence of a fixed number of MCMV-immune T cells, and titration to excess of syngeneic 3 h or 18 h MCMV-infected MEF, lower interleukin-3 plateau levels were obtained with 3 h than with 18 h MCMV-infected stimulators. This suggested that fewer T cells responded to 3 h than to 18 h MCMV-infected MEF.
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