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Different chemokine expression in lethal and non-lethal murine west nile virus infection

✍ Scribed by Kazuya Shirato; Takashi Kimura; Tetsuya Mizutani; Hiroaki Kariwa; Ikuo Takashima


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2004
Tongue
English
Weight
135 KB
Volume
74
Category
Article
ISSN
0146-6615

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

West Nile (WN) virus is a mosquito‐borne flavivirus that can cause lethal encephalitis in humans and horses. The WN virus endemic in New York City (NY) in 1999 caused large‐scale mortality of wild birds that was not evident in endemic areas in other parts of the world, and the pathogenesis of the WN virus strain isolated in NY (NY strain) appears to differ from that of previously isolated strains. However, the pathogenesis of NY strain infection remains unclear. This study examined CC (RANTES/CCL5, MIP‐1α/CCL3, MIP‐1β/CCL4) and CXC (IP‐10/CXCL10, B lymphocyte chemoattractant (BLC/CXCL13), and B cell‐ and monocyte‐activating chemokine (BMAC/CXCL14)) chemokine expression during lethal NY strain and non‐lethal Eg101 strain infection in mice. We found that the mRNA of the CC chemokines, RANTES, MIP‐1α, MIP‐1β, and IP‐10 was highly up‐regulated in the brain of NY strain‐infected mice. By contrast, BLC mRNA was not detected in either group of mice, and BMAC mRNA was highly up‐regulated in late stage of infection with the non‐lethal Eg101 strain relative to levels in NY strain‐infected mice. J. Med. Virol. 74:507–513, 2004. © 2004 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.


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