Apoptotic neurodegeneration induced by influenza A virus infection in the mouse brain
- PMID: 11018449
- DOI: 10.1016/s1286-4579(00)01286-7
Apoptotic neurodegeneration induced by influenza A virus infection in the mouse brain
Abstract
Neurodegeneration in the brain induced by the WSN strain of influenza A virus was investigated after stereotaxic introduction into the olfactory bulb of C57BL/6 mice. Immunohistochemistry detected WSN virus-infected neurons in the anterior olfactory nucleus as early as day 3 postinfection. Thereafter, they became shrunken and showed loss of neurite-immunolabeling and chromatin condensation. Infected neurons died by day 12, degenerating into multiple small granular bodies. The terminal deoxynucleotidyltransferase-mediated dUTP nick end-labeling method demonstrated DNA fragmentation in infected neurons at day 7 and also in such granular bodies at day 12. In perforin-deficient mice, the appearance of virally induced apoptotic neurodegeneration was delayed and virus infection continued for a longer period of 35 days postinfection. These findings indicate that perforin-mediated neuroapoptosis appears significant in exterminating the intracellular pathogen at an early stage of infection.
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