Effects of cyclosporin A on humoral immune response and resistance against vesicular stomatitis virus in mice.

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RESUMO

The effect of cyclosporin A (CS-A) on the antiviral humoral response was studied by using vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV); VSV provided the opportunity to simultaneously assess both T-independent and T-dependent antibody responses. The T-independent anti-VSV immunoglobulin M (IgM) response was virtually unaffected, whereas the T-dependent primary anti-VSV IgG response was suppressed by CS-A; in contrast, the secondary IgG response was highly resistant to CS-A. Moreover, once the switch from IgM to IgG had occurred, the primary response also became refractory to suppression by CS-A. We concluded that the effect of CS-A on the primary anti-VSV antibody response was mediated via impairment of a T-dependent mechanism; in contrast, memory T cells or memory B cells or both were quite resistant to the suppressive effects of CS-A. CS-A treatment rendered mice highly susceptible to VSV infection; under CS-A treatment, mortality was 100% after infection via footpads, whereas immunocompetent mice survived. Since CS-A does not impair induction of early T-independent anti-VSV IgM neutralizing antibodies, this high mortality in CS-A treated mice illustrates the crucial role of CS-A-sensitive cells in resistance against VSV.

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