Immune Cells Predict Outcome Of West Nile Virus Infection
Posted on: Tuesday, 13 October 2009, 11:11 CDT
Infection with West Nile virus (WNV) causes no symptoms in most people. However, it can cause fever, meningitis, and/or encephalitis. What determines the outcome of infection with WNV in different people has not been determined. But now, Philip Norris and colleagues, at the Blood Systems Research Institute, San Francisco, have found that levels of immune cells known as Tregs (immune cells that suppress the function of other immune cells) in the blood of a human or mouse infected with WNV predict whether the person or mouse will have symptoms of infection.
In the study, analysis of blood donated by 32 individuals acutely infected with WNV indicated that the frequency of Tregs increased substantially following infection. However, those individuals that were asymptomatic had higher levels of Tregs than those that exhibited symptoms of infection. Similar observations were made in mice infected with WNV. Consistent with a role for Tregs in controlling the symptoms of WNV infection, mice lacking Tregs were more susceptible to lethal infection with WNV than control mice. The authors therefore conclude that higher levels of Tregs in the blood after infection with WNV protect against severe disease in individuals with a fully functioning immune system.
---
On the Net:
Related Articles
- Scientists Successfully Reprogram Blood Cells
- Distinct Set Of White Blood Cells Found To Set The Pace Of Wound Repair In Lungs
- Scientists Show White Blood Cells Move Like Millipedes
- Mice Put Cancer on Ice?: Study of Ordinary Lab Mice Injected With White Blood Cells From Cancer-Resistant One Held the Disease at Bay
- Tracking membranes of rupturing blood cells sheds light on malaria infection
- Inflammation and Infection: Imaging Properties of ^Sup 18^F-FDG- Labeled White Blood Cells Versus ^Sup 18^F-FDG
- Researchers discover how malaria parasite disperses from red blood cells
- Protein Potential LLC Announces That a Structural Basis for Malaria Parasite Invasion of Red Blood Cells is Identified and Published, Raising Hopes for Improved Design of Anti-Malaria Vaccines and Drugs
- Researchers Boost White Blood Cells’ Ability to Kill Bacteria
- Researchers Work to Infect Mice With HIV
User Comments (0)

RSS Feeds