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  • Title: Enhancement of disease by neutralizing antiviral antibodies in the absence of primed antiviral cytotoxic T cells.
    Author: Battegay M, Kyburz D, Hengartner H, Zinkernagel RM.
    Journal: Eur J Immunol; 1993 Dec; 23(12):3236-41. PubMed ID: 8258339.
    Abstract:
    The effects of neutralizing antibodies on the disease course in mice infected with the noncytopathic lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) were evaluated. Whereas non-neutralizing antisera exhibiting high enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay titers had no effect on T cell responses and their consequences, neutralizing antisera modulated them variably. Neutralizing antibodies were able to prevent lethal choriomeningitis after intracerebral infection with a neurotropic LCMV-isolate (ARMSTRONG) although they could not control local virus replication. The same antibodies exhibited little or no protective effect on choriomeningitis induced by LCMV-WE, a viscerotrope isolate. Surprisingly, these antibodies rendered mice much more susceptible to choriomeningitis after intracerebral infection with LCMV DOCILE, a very rapidly spreading lymphocyto-viscerotrope virus; in this situation antibodies prevented overwhelming infection which causes deletion of immunopathogenic cytotoxic T cell responses. Thus preexisting neutralizing antiviral antibodies had little influence on local virus spread in peripheral tissues but they reduced hematogenic spread and infection of antigen-presenting cells; thereby they influenced the primary cytotoxic T cell (CTL) response and indirectly modulated the extent of T cell-mediated immunopathology in peripheral organs. These results may explain why vaccines inducing neutralizing antibodies but no CTL may enhance an immunopathological disease caused by challenge infection with a noncytopathic virus.
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