Rebalancing viral and immune damage versus repair prevents death from lethal influenza infection
- PMID: 41264690
- DOI: 10.1126/science.adr4635
Rebalancing viral and immune damage versus repair prevents death from lethal influenza infection
Abstract
Maintaining tissue function while eliminating infected cells is fundamental, and inflammatory damage plays a major contribution to lethality after lung infection. We tested 50 immunomodulatory regimes to determine their ability to protect mice from lethal infection. Only neutrophil depletion soon after infection prevented death from influenza. This result suggests that the infected host passed an early tipping point after which limiting innate damage alone could not rescue lung function. We investigated treatments that could have efficacy when administered later in infection. We found that partial limitation of viral spread together with enhancement of epithelial repair, by interferon blockade or limiting CD8+ T cell-mediated killing of epithelial cells, reduced lethality. This finding highlights the importance of rebalancing repair and damage processes in the survival of pulmonary infections.
Update of
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Rebalancing Viral and Immune Damage versus Tissue Repair Prevents Death from Lethal Influenza Infection.bioRxiv [Preprint]. 2024 Jul 7:2024.07.04.601620. doi: 10.1101/2024.07.04.601620. bioRxiv. 2024. Update in: Science. 2025 Nov 20;390(6775):eadr4635. doi: 10.1126/science.adr4635. PMID: 39372755 Free PMC article. Updated. Preprint.
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