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Abstract
Intravenous (i.v.) injection of u.v. light-inactivated herpes simplex virus type 1 (UV HSV-1) at the time of HSV-1 corneal infection reduced the cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) response to HSV-1, and significantly reduced the incidence of HSV-1-induced corneal stromal disease in A/J mice. The spread of HSV-1 through the eye after corneal infection, detected using engineered HSV-1 (US3::Tn5-lacZ) with the lacZ gene under the transcriptional control of the viral late gene promoter for glycoprotein C, was also markedly reduced by i.v. UV HSV-1 injection. The restriction of HSV-1 corneal invasiveness in i.v. UV HSV-1-injected mice preceded the onset of a detectable specific cell-mediated or humoral immune response to HSV-1, and was accompanied by an elevated serum titre of interferon (IFN-α), reversed by anti-IFN-α/β antibody, and mimicked by systemic IFN-α treatment. IFN-α-treated mice developed a normal CTL response to HSV-1 after corneal infection, but the corneal invasiveness of the virus was markedly reduced and none of the treated mice developed corneal stromal disease. Together with our previous findings that HSV-1-specific CTLs participate in the pathogenesis of corneal stromal disease, these results indicate that i.v. injection of UV HSV-1 at the time of corneal infection may prevent stromal disease by the combined effects of IFN-mediated reduction of the spread of virus in the cornea and inhibition of the activity of the HSV-specific T lymphocytes that induce tissue destruction in the corneal stroma.
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