Immunosuppression during viral oncogenesis. V. Resistance to virus-induced immunosuppressive factor
- PMID: 2837511
Immunosuppression during viral oncogenesis. V. Resistance to virus-induced immunosuppressive factor
Abstract
Rabbits given malignant rabbit fibroma virus (MV) develop severe immunologic dysfunction during the course of infection. Splenic T lymphocytes from these rabbits elaborate a soluble non-specific immunosuppressive factor (virus-induced suppressor factor (VISF]. As malignant rabbit fibroma virus infection progresses, normal immunologic responsiveness returns. This recovery is multi-factorial and involves production by T lymphocytes of a soluble factor capable of antagonizing the activity of VISF. This soluble anti-suppressor factor (ASF) is not a generalized immunologic potentiator. Its sole apparent effect on immune function appears to be to antagonize the activity of VISF. The protective effects of ASF are evident only when suppressor factors and ASF are simultaneously present in culture. Pre-treatment of target cells with ASF-containing culture supernatants does not render them insensitive to the immunosuppressive effects of subsequent treatment with VISF. In addition, ASF appears to be directly responsible for antagonizing VISF activity. That is, ASF does not appear to initiate an anti-suppressive cascade by activating a population of cells that in turn generate secondary protective factors. ASF-producing cells do not bind Vicia villosa lectin, as do contra-suppressor cells described by others. In almost all of these features, the system we describe herein differs from systems in which other investigators have described factors that antagonize the effects of suppressor factors.
Similar articles
-
Immunosuppression during viral oncogenesis. IV. Generation of soluble virus-induced immunologic suppressor molecules.J Immunol. 1988 Mar 15;140(6):2051-9. J Immunol. 1988. PMID: 2831278
-
Reversal of virus-induced immune suppression.J Immunol. 1986 Apr 1;136(7):2649-53. J Immunol. 1986. PMID: 3005416
-
Immunosuppression in viral oncogenesis. III. Effects of virus infection on interleukin 1 and interleukin 2 generation and responsiveness.J Immunol. 1986 Dec 1;137(11):3632-8. J Immunol. 1986. PMID: 3023485
-
Role and function of antigen nonspecific suppressor factors.Crit Rev Immunol. 1987;7(2):93-130. Crit Rev Immunol. 1987. PMID: 2438085 Review.
-
Cell-mediated immunity and immunosuppression in herpes simplex virus infection.Immunodeficiency. 1993;5(1):33-90. Immunodeficiency. 1993. PMID: 8167747 Review.
Cited by
-
Poxvirus pathogenesis.Microbiol Rev. 1991 Mar;55(1):80-122. doi: 10.1128/mr.55.1.80-122.1991. Microbiol Rev. 1991. PMID: 1851533 Free PMC article. Review.
-
Perforin and serine esterase gene expression in stimulated human T cells. Kinetics, mitogen requirements, and effects of cyclosporin A.J Exp Med. 1989 Dec 1;170(6):2105-18. doi: 10.1084/jem.170.6.2105. J Exp Med. 1989. PMID: 2584937 Free PMC article.
Publication types
MeSH terms
Substances
Grants and funding
LinkOut - more resources
Research Materials