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473 J. gen. ViroL (1989), 70, 473-478. Printed in Great Britain Key words: interferon (Mu[FN-~/fl)/S R V/CNS Interferon Induced within the Central Nervous System during Infection Is Inconsequential as a Mechanism Responsible for Murine Resistance to Street Rabies Virus By D O N A L D L. L O D M E L L , ~* D A N N Y L. W I E D B R A U K L A R R Y C. E W A L T 1 2 AND ~Laboratory of Persistent Viral Diseases, Rocky Mountain Laboratories, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, Hamilton, Montana 59840 and 2Difco Research and Development Center, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48108, U.S.A. (Accepted 17 October 1988) SUMMARY SJL/J mice are resistant, whereas A/WySnJ mice are susceptible to intraperitoneally (i.p.) inoculated street rabies virus (SRV). In this report we determine whether interferon (IFN) induced within the central nervous system (CNS) of these mice during infection is associated with resistance. We show that the high concentration of type 1 interferon (IFN-c¢//~) within the CNS of A/WySnJ mice is ineffective in inhibiting SRV replication in these tissues, and is unimportant in ameliorating disease. More importantly, the 100~o survival of SRV-infected SJL/J mice following neutralization of IFN within the CNS with anti-IFN-~/fl suggests that protection of target ceils by this minimal amount of IFN is not the mechanism responsible for the innate resistance of SJL/J mice to i.p. inoculated SRV. The importance of interferon (IFN) as the earliest of the known host defence mechanisms against viral infections has been well documented. The first evidence that a rabies virus infection could induce an IFN response came from Stewart & Sulkin (1966) who showed that large amounts of IFN and virus were present in brains of hamsters infected with rabies. Subsequently, it was established that rabies virus is sensitive to IFN, in that rabies-infected mice, hamsters, rabbits and monkeys are protected from disease by either passively administering IFN, or by inducing IFN at or near the time of infection, but before viral invasion of peripheral nerves and/or the central nervous system (CNS.) (Fenje & Postic, 1970; Postic & Fenje, 1971 ; Janis & Habel, 1972; Wiktor et al., 1972; Hilfenhaus et al., 1975; Weinm~inn et al., 1979). Less is known, however, about the I F N that is induced in target organs during rabies virus infections, and what effect this virus-induced I F N has on the course of disease. We have a unique model to study this effect. In previous studies we found that murine resistance to intraperitoneally (i.p.) inoculated street rabies virus (SRV) is genetically controlled by the concurrent presence of each of two segregating genes. SJL/J mice are resistant, whereas A/WySnJ mice are susceptible (Lodmell, 1983). Additional studies showed that SRV seldom ascends from the spinal cord to the brain of SJL/J mice that have high serum titres of anti-SRV neutralizing antibody (Lodmell & Ewalt, 1985). In this report we expanded our studies to determine whether virus-induced I F N is present in the CNS of these two strains of mice following infection with SRV, and if so whether its presence is associated with resistance. To determine whether i.p. administered SRV induces a systemic I F N response, 20 8- to 15week-old female SJL/J and 20 8- t o 15-week-old female A/WySnJ mice were inoculated with a 10~o mouse brain suspension containing 5 x 107 mouse intracranial (i.c.) 5 0 ~ lethal doses (MICLDs0) of a wild-type SRV that had been isolated from an adult bat (Eptesicus fuscus) 0000-8589 © 1989 SGM Downloaded from www.microbiologyresearch.org by IP: 88.99.165.207 On: Sat, 17 Jun 2017 10:08:37 474 Short communication (Lodmell, 1983). All of the mice were bled from the retro-orbital plexus 2 and 6 h postinoculation, and at 24 h intervals for the next 7 days. Individual sera were assayed for antiviral activity on outbred Swiss Webster mouse embryo (ME) cells by using a standard c.p.e, bioassay (Armstrong, 1981), and a vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) challenge. Negative control sera were obtained from mice that had been inoculated with a 10~ normal mouse brain suspension; positive control sera were obtained from mice that had been inoculated intravenously (i.v.) 2 h previously with 50 ~tg of poly(I).poly(C) (NIAID Antiviral Substances Program). I F N titres (units; U) were estabished as the reciprocal of the serum or tissue dilution that reduced the number of VSV plaques by 50 ~ as compared to ME cell monolayers that were incubated with normal mouse sera. In our assays, the N I H international reference mouse I F N (G002904511) titred 1280 U. The sensitivity of the assay was 10 U of IFN. The results showed that no antiviral activity was detected in the sera of either mouse strain for the first 5 days following the i.p. inoculation of SRV. Minimal titres of antiviral activity (10 to 20 U) were present in sera of three of 20 SJL/J mice and four of 20 A/WySnJ mice on the 7th day post-inoculation. Furthermore, no I F N was detected in the peritoneal wash of similarly inoculated mice of either strain for each of the 7 days following i.p. inoculation of SRV (data not shown). Thus, i.p. inoculated SRV did not induce a prominent systemic antiviral response in either the resistant or susceptible strain of mice. In contrast, sera from uninfected mice of each strain contained high titres of I F N 2 h after an i.v. inoculation of 50 ~tg of the IFN inducer poly(I), poly(C); the geometric mean I F N titre of sera from six SJL/J mice was 3980 (range 1280 to 5120), and that of sera from six A/WySnJ mice was 3670 (range 1280 to 5120). These data indicate that the IFN-inducing systems of the susceptible and resistant mice are essentially similar, in that (i) minimal amounts of systemic antiviral activity are induced following i.p. inoculation of SRV and (ii) high titres of systemic I F N are induced after i.v. inoculation of poly(I), poly(C). To determine whether antiviral activity was present in the CNS following i.p. inoculation of virus, 56 susceptible A/WySnJ and 56 resistant SJL/J mice were inoculated with 5 x 107 MICLDs0 of SRV. At various times post-inoculation eight mice of each strain were exsanguinated and cerebrospinal fluids (CSFs), spinal cords and brains were assayed for infectious virus (i.c. inoculation of 21-day-old mice) and I F N (Fig. 1 a, b). The data in Fig. 1 (a) show that virus was present in spinal cords and brains of A/WySnJ mice 5 days post-inoculation. Thereafter, virus titres steadily increased in brains until day 10 and in spinal cords until day 8; virus was not detected in CSFs. IFN was initially detected on day 7 in CSFs, spinal cords and brains of A/WySnJ mice. Thereafter, IFN titres in brains steadily increased. IFN titres in CSFs and spinal cords increased until day 8 and then decreased slightly on day 10. Little, if any, I F N was detected in the sera of these mice before day 8. IFN titres ranging from 40 to 320 U were detected in sera on the 10th day (data not shown). Furthermore, there was a direct correlation between the concentrations of infectious virus and IFN titres in brains and spinal cords of A/WySnJ mice; in general, the higher the virus titre, the higher the I F N titre. Likewise, the concentration of I F N in CSFs correlated directly with the virus concentration in spinal cords. In contrast to SRV-susceptible A/WySnJ mice, SRV was first detected in spinal cords of resistant SJL/J mice on day 6 (Fig. 1 b). Thereafter, low concentrations of virus were detected in spinal cords on days 7 and 8 but not on day 10; trace amounts of virus were detected in brains of only four of 24 (17 ~ ) SJL/J mice on days 7 and 8. Only minimal amounts of I F N were detected in spinal cords at these intervals; I F N was only detected in brains on day 8. Minimal I F N titres (10 units) were detected in sera of two SJL/J mice 8 days post-inoculation, but no I F N was detected in CSFs of any mice of this strain. Thus, our data suggest that the high concentrations of IFN in the CNS of SRV-susceptible A/WySnJ mice were induced by replicating virus. More importantly, this high concentration of IFN did not appear to have a direct effect on inhibiting virus replication or limiting the infection, because SRV infections consistently resulted in the death of A/WySnJ mice by the 12th to 14th day after i.p. inoculation of virus (Lodmell & Ewalt, 1985). Furthermore, the minimal amounts of IFN that were present in the CNS of SJL/J mice correlated with the minimal amount of viral replication that occurred in these tissues. Downloaded from www.microbiologyresearch.org by IP: 88.99.165.207 On: Sat, 17 Jun 2017 10:08:37 475 Short communication /I i,,, II / 5-0',1--(a) II___~ , i 4"0F[ i ,, /t(: i -r-r4i, 5 rn- 10 5.0 (b) i II , 105 104 k3 110'~.~4.0"~ ~- 103 ,~ Z "7- 2.0i 0 .. " 102 ~ 102 = .~ 2-0 "" i 1.0 Oo1= 3 <lO' oo 1 3 '5 6 7 8 " 10 <10~ Time post-inoculation (days) Fig. 1. Virus and IFN titres in CNS tissues of susceptible A/WySnJ (a) and resistant SJL/J (b) mice after i.p. inoculation of 5 x 107 MICLDso of SRV. At various times after inoculation mice were exsanguinated. At each interval CSFs, spinal cords and brains of eight mice of each strain were harvested and assayed. The CNS tissues were prepared as 10% suspensions. IFN titres [in CSF ([3), spinal cord ( i ) and brain ( [])] are expressed as U in CSF or tissue suspension as mentioned in the text. Virus titres [in spinal cord ( ) and brain (...)] are expressed as MICLDs0/0-03 ml of a 10% tissue suspension. The minimal concentration of virus necessary for calculation of SRV titres is 100.7 MICLD50/0.03 ml. The virus-positive SJL/J brains are shown only to indicate that a few brains were positive. The minimal concentrations of virus in these brains did not permit determination of titres. To determine whether the I F N detected in these assays was induced in the C N S during infection and was not produced by the M E cells used in the in vitro assay, brains and spinal cords from eight SRV-infected A / W y S n J mice were pooled, prepared as a 10% suspension and assayed for I F N and infectious virus. It was shown that all virus infectivity was pelleted from this C N S suspension following centrifugation at 50000 r.p.m, for 1 h. More importantly, the remaining supernatant fluid still contained 100% of the I F N (titre 1280), whereas the pelleted SRV induced only a minimal amount of I F N from the M E cells (titre 20) (data not shown). Thus, the I F N present in the C N S of A/WySnJ-infected mice was induced in vivo during infection and was not induced from the M E cells that were used in the in vitro assay. A pool o f brains and spinal cords from A / W y S n J SRV-infected mice also was used to characterize the I F N . The data in Table 1 indicate that the antiviral activity was a typical virusinduced p H 2,0-stable type 1 I F N with ~ and fl specificity. In addition, the I F N in C N S tissues of SJL/J mice also was neutralized by the rabbit anti-murine IFN-ct/fl. These d a t a support the work of other investigators who described a similar I F N in brain extracts and plasma of mice that were infected with the challenge virus standard fixed rabies virus rather than an SRV (Marcovistz et al., 1984a, 1986). To this point, our data suggest that neither virus-induced systemic I F N nor virus-induced I F N in the C N S is important in the resistance of SJL/J mice to i.p. inoculated SRV. There were, however, low titres of I F N present in the C N S of SJL/J mice 7 and 8 days post-inoculation. Because I F N was present in infected tissues at these intervals, although at low levels, it was reevaluated for having a potential role in resistance. Thus, at various times after virus inoculation, Downloaded from www.microbiologyresearch.org by IP: 88.99.165.207 On: Sat, 17 Jun 2017 10:08:37 476 Short communication T a b l e 1. Characterization of the IFN-ct/fl induced by SR V within the CNS of susceptible A~ WySnJ mice* Treatment Interferon titre (U)t None pH 2.0 (60 h at 4 °C):~ 56 °C for 1 h Trypsin (1 mg/ml)§ RNase (50 rtg/ml)ll Dialysis (14000 Mr cut-off) Centrifugation (100000 g for 4 h) Neutralization with 3000 units of antiserum to Mouse IFN-ct//~ Mouse IFN-/~ Normal rabbit globulin 1280 1280 1280 < 10 1280 1280 1280 < 10 80 1280 * Brains and spinal cords of eight SRV-infected A/WySnJ mice were pooled, prepared as a 10~ suspension, and the antiviral activity of the supernatant fluid was characterized. t The titre (U) represents the reciprocal dilution that reduces the number of VSV plaques by 50~ as compared to ME cell monolayers incubated with a similar 10~ mouse brain suspension from uninfected mice. :~ Samples were dialysed against 0.15 M-HCI-KCI (pH 2.0) for 24 h at 4 °C. The pH was neutralized by dialysis against Hanks' balanced salt solution (pH 7.4) for 16 h at 4 °C. § Gibco trypsin (1:250) was added to the IFN to a final concentration of 1 mg/ml. Following incubation for 1 h at 37 °C, 1.0 mg of soybean trypsin inhibitor was added. IIBovine pancreatic RNase A in 1 mM-EDTA was added to 1 ml of IFN to give a final concentration of 50 Ixg/ml. After incubation for 1 h at 37 °C, the pH was adjusted to 7.4 with 0.1 M-NaOH. ¶ Lee Biomolecular Research Laboratories. T a b l e 2. I.c. inoculated rabbit anti-mouse IFN-ct/fl does not decrease the resistance of SJL/J mice to SR V* Time after SRV infection of anti-IFN inoculation (days) Test 3 5 6 7 8 5, 6 7, 8 6, 7, 8 6, 7, 8, 9 Controlst 6, 7, 8, 9 (NRS) SJL/J A/WySnJ Survivors/total 4/4 4/4 4/4 6/6 4/4 4/4 4/4 4/4 4/4 4/4 6/6 0/6 * Eight- to 12-week-old SRV-resistant SJL/J and SRV-susceptible A/WySnJ mice were inoculated i.p. with 5 x 107 MICLDs0 of SRV. At various times thereafter single or multiple inoculations of 3000 units of rabbit antimouse IFN-c~/flwere administered i.c. The anti-mouse IFN (Catalog no. 21032, Lot no. 87021) was quantified by Lee Biomolecular Research Laboratories by comparative assays with the anti-IFN reference agents provided by the Antiviral Substances Program, NIAID, NIH. One neutralizing unit completely neutralizes 3 to 10 U of corresponding IFN activity. Assays in our laboratory produced similar results, i.e. 10 neutralizing units neutralized 50 U of IFN-~/fl. t Control SJL/J mice were inoculated with SRV and normal rabbit serum (NRS) or SRV only. Control A/WySnJ mice were inoculated with SRV only. The experiment was terminated 21 days after SRV inoculation. single or multiple i.c. inoculations of 3000 units of r a b b i t anti-mouse I F N - ~ / f l (Lee B i o m o l e c u l a r R e s e a r c h Laboratories, San Diego, Ca., U . S . A . ) were a d m i n i s t e r e d before, concurrently or after the intervals w h e n I F N had been previously d e t e c t e d in S J L / J C N S tissues. C o n t r o l S J L / J m i c e were inoculated i.p. w i t h S R V alone, or w i t h S R V i.p. and n o r m a l rabbit s e r u m i.c. C o n t r o l A / W y S n J m i c e r e c e i v e d only S R V i.p. T h e d a t a in T a b l e 2 illustrate that n o n e o f the S R V - Downloaded from www.microbiologyresearch.org by IP: 88.99.165.207 On: Sat, 17 Jun 2017 10:08:37 Short communication 477 infected SJL/J mice died, regardless of the interval or the quantity of anti-IFN that was administered. Furthermore, spinal cords and brains removed from other SJL/J mice that also received 3000 units of anti-IFN i.c. 7 and 8 days post-infection did not contain I F N activity 8 days after SRV infection (data not shown). These data suggest that the i.c. inoculated anti-IFN neutralized the I F N in the CNS of the SJL/J mice that survived in the in vivo experiment (Table 2). SJL/J mice that received only SRV had spinal cord I F N titres of 20 at this time (Fig. 1 b). Anti-IFN was not given to A/WySnJ mice. Thus, neutralization of the minimal amount of I F N that was present in CNS tissues of SJL/J mice did not affect their resistance to SRV, suggesting that protection of target cells by I F N was not the mechanism responsible for the innate resistance of this mouse strain to SRV. There is no doubt that rabies mortality can be markedly reduced by the local injection of IFN, potent vaccines that induce IFN prior to neutralizing antibody, and/or IFN inducers such as poly(I), poly(C) or poly(IC), poly(LC). The exogenously transferred or the endogenous I F N that is induced in injected muscles appears to limit the minimal extraneural replication of virus in striated muscle cells at the site of infection before virus infects peripheral nerves and spreads to the CNS (Baer, 1981). Additional evidence supporting the importance of I F N in rabies infections has been documented by Marcovistz et al. (1986) and GuiUon & Tsiang (1980), who showed that infected mice pretreated with anti-IFN-ct/fl globulin had a significantly increased sensitivity to infection compared to normally infected mice. Nonetheless, the present study, as well as studies of others (Stewart & Sulkin, 1966; Smith, 1981 ; Marcovistz et al., 1984b), have shown that IFN was not protective after virus reached the CNS because rabies virus-infected animals died with very high levels of I F N in CNS tissues. The ineffectiveness of locally produced I F N to protect mice following virus invasion of the CNS could be due to several different circumstances. It may be that I F N is produced in insufficient amounts or produced too late in the infection. Alternatively, the total amount of virus in CNS tissues may be too high for death to be prevented by IFN, or damage to CNS cells may have reached a stage at which inhibition of viral replication by I F N no longer protects the host (Postic & Fenje, 1971). It also may be that few I F N receptors are present on the surface of CNS cells. If so, these cells would be less amenable to the protective effect of IFN. Furthermore, the lack of antiviral effectiveness of IFN may be due to the failure of the oligo-2',5'-adenylate synthetase and protein kinase IFN-dependent enzymes to elicit an antiviral state in the CNS (Marcovistz et al., 1984a, b, 1986). There may also be genetic control of the sensitivity to I F N action, as has been previously shown by the poor inhibition of influenza A virus replication by I F N in mouse cells lacking the gene M x (Hailer, 1981). It has been shown that primary cultures of murine astrocytes, but not neurons, produce I F N that is biologically and antigenically similar to IFN-ct/fl (Tedeschi et al., 1986). Furthermore, there appears to be compartmentation of IFN in rabies virus-infected brains in that the highest level of IFN is detected in the brain stem and the lowest level is in the striatum (Marcovistz et at., 1984a). Compartmentation of IFN also has been shown in patients dying from St Louis encephalitis; I F N is present in frontal lobes, cerebellum and basal ganglia but not brain stem (Luby et al., 1969). Likewise, marked differences in I F N content between certain areas of human brains infected with Western equine encephalitis virus have been reported (Luby et al., 1971). Thus, it may be that astrocytes in different locations of the brain, and possibly the spinal cord, produce different concentrations of IFN. If so, these concentration differences throughout the CNS may make it impossible for I F N to reach all of the cells that need protection, and the host will die. We are still uncertain why SJL/J mice are resistant to i.p. inoculated SRV. Nonetheless, because immunosuppression of these mice with cyclophosphamide converts an asymptomatic infection into a lethal one (Lodmell & Ewalt, 1985), we are of the opinion that resistance is controlled by the immune response. Our present studies are focusing on cytotoxic T cells and their interaction with the humoral immune response. We thank Irene Cook Rodriguez for typing the manuscript and Robert Evans for graphic arts assistance. Downloaded from www.microbiologyresearch.org by IP: 88.99.165.207 On: Sat, 17 Jun 2017 10:08:37 478 Short communication REFERENCES ARMSTRONG, J. A. (1981). 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