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. 1999 Feb 22;67(3):285-94.
doi: 10.1016/s0165-2427(98)00230-x.

Cytotoxic interactions between bovine parainfluenza type 3 virus and bovine alveolar macrophages

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Cytotoxic interactions between bovine parainfluenza type 3 virus and bovine alveolar macrophages

B M Adair et al. Vet Immunol Immunopathol. .

Abstract

This paper describes an investigation of the cytotoxic activity of bovine alveolar macrophages for parainfluenza type 3 (PI-3) virus-infected target cells, using 51Cr release assays. Alveolar macrophages from uninfected calves were shown to be capable of killing PI-3 virus infected cells without the presence of antibody or complement (antibody-independent cell-mediated cytotoxicity). The level of killing was shown to vary from animal to animal with specific lysis values ranging from <5% to 70%. Presence of PI-3 virus antiserum was shown to inhibit, rather than enhance macrophage cytotoxicity in a dose-dependent manner, suggesting that bovine alveolar macrophages do not always exhibit antibody-dependent lysis in all cases. Following intranasal and intratracheal inoculation of calves with PI-3 virus, the level of cytotoxicity by macrophages lavaged from the lungs of the calves increased substantially, and by Day 5 post inoculation, levels of 95% to 98% specific lysis were recorded. After Day 5, the killing ability decreased rapidly to low levels. Cell-free lavage fluids, collected from PI-3 virus infected and control calves at various times throughout the experiment, were incubated with aliquots of an alveolar macrophage population from an uninfected donor calf, which initially showed a low level of killing, and were subsequently added to PI-3 virus infected target cells. The recorded levels of cytotoxicity, mirrored those which were seen with the initial macrophage effector cells from the infected and control animals, suggesting that macrophage cytotoxicity was largely controlled by extracellular factors.

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