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T helper cell- and CD40-dependent germline IgM prevents chronic virus-induced demyelinating disease

  作者 Gil-Cruz, C; Perez-Shibayama, C; Firner, S; Waisman, A; Bechmann, I; Thiel, V; Cervantes-Barragan, L; Ludewig, B  
  选自 期刊  Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America;  卷期  2012年109-4;  页码  1233-1238  
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[摘要]Generation of antiviral IgM is usually considered as a marker of a short-lived initial antibody response that is replaced by hyper-mutated and more-efficient IgG. However, once viruses have established a particular niche for their persistence (e.g., within the CNS), the immune system has to specifically mobilize a broad range of antimicrobial effectors to contain the pathogen in the long term. Infection of the CNS with the mouse hepatitis virus (MHV) provides a unique model situation in which the extent of inflammatory CNS disease is determined by the balance between antiviral immune control, viral replication, and immune-mediated damage. We show here that whereas antibody-or B cell-deficient mice failed to contain MHV CNS infection and developed progressive demyelinating disease, germline IgM produced in activation-induced cytidine deaminase-deficient mice (aicda(-/-)) provided long-term protection against the chronic multiple sclerosis-like disease. Furthermore, we found that appropriate B-cell activation within the CNS-draining lymph node and subsequent CXCR3-mediated migration of antiviral IgM-secreting cells to the infected CNS was dependent on CD40-mediated interaction of B cells with T helper cells. These data indicate that the CD40-mediated collaboration of T and B cells is critical to secure neuroprotective IgM responses during viral CNS infection.

 
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