Analysis of antibody responses to phenotypically distinct lentiviruses.

J Clin Microbiol

Department of Pathology, College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Science, Colorado State University, Fort Collins 80523.

Published: April 1990

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigated immune responses in sheep infected with different strains of ovine lentivirus (OvLV) using an immunoblotting assay to detect antibodies to viral proteins.
  • Two phenotypes were used: a rapid/high strain (85/34) that caused fast viral lysis and a slow/low strain (84/28 and 85/14) that replicated slowly with less lysis.
  • Antibodies to the major structural proteins appeared in a specific order, with notable differences in responses to the rapid vs. slow strains; some lambs did not develop antibodies to the p14 protein, highlighting variability in immune response.

Article Abstract

To define the immune responses against phenotypically and pathogenically distinct lentiviruses, we used an immunoblotting assay to study antibodies to viral proteins of ovine lentivirus (OvLV) in 16 experimentally and 12 naturally infected sheep. Two distinct phenotypes of OvLV were used to experimentally infect lambs: strain 85/34, a "rapid/high" isolate which rapidly induced lysis in infected primary macrophage cultures and replicated to relatively high titers, and strains 84/28 and 85/14, "slow/low" isolates which induced slowly progressive syncytia with minimal lysis in vitro and replicated only to low titers in the same cell type. Serum antibodies against four major viral structural proteins, gp105, p25, p16, and p14, were detected. In a longitudinal study of experimentally infected lambs, the antibody to p25 (major gag protein) usually appeared first (average, about 3 weeks postinoculation [p.i.]) and was followed in about 2 weeks by p16, p14, and gp105 almost simultaneously. Six of 16 animals did not develop anti-p14 antibody by the time of necropsy at 9 to 29 weeks p.i. Two of 10 lambs which developed antibody to p14 had the antibody only transiently from 3 to 8 or 13 weeks p.i. and lost it by the time of necropsy at 21 or 22 weeks p.i. In contrast, antibodies to the other three structural proteins remained fairly constant until the time of necropsy. There were differences in the antibody responses of the experimentally infected lambs to the two phenotypes of OvLV. Seven of 10 (70%) lambs which were inoculated with the rapid/high strain developed antibody to p14, whereas only 17% of the lambs inoculated with the slow/low strains had antibody to this protein. In the longitudinal study, no decline was observed in the activity of any specific antibody such as that which occurs with anti-p24 antibody in human immunodeficiency virus infection, except in the case of anti-p14 antibody in two lambs. There were no significant differences in antibody titers against p25, p16, and p14 in final blood samples between rapid/high virus- and slow/low virus-infected groups. However, the rapid/high virus-infected group developed a fivefold-higher geometric mean titer of anti-env product (gp 105) antibody than did the slow/low virus-infected group (P

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC267790PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/jcm.28.4.764-770.1990DOI Listing

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