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* Laboratory of Viral Immunology,
Laboratory of Virology,
Rheumatology and Immunology Research Center, Centre Hospitalier de lUniversité Laval Research Center (Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Québec) and Université Laval, Québec, Canada
| Abstract |
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| Introduction |
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Currently available antiviral agents with proven efficacy against CMV include Cytovene (ganciclovir) and Foscavir (foscarnet) (5, 6). These agents inhibit the synthesis of metabolically active virus and are not effective against nonreplicating or latent virus. Intravenous ganciclovir has been used successfully to treat solid-organ transplant recipients with CMV infection. Because of its renal toxicity, the dosage needs to be decreased in patients with renal disorders, and maintenance therapy is seriously limited (7, 8). Emergence of ganciclovir-resistant strains of CMV following repeated use of ganciclovir is well documented (9, 10). Current CMV treatments are therefore not optimal, and new approaches are needed to prevent CMV infection in organ and bone marrow transplant recipients.
Leukotriene B4 (LTB4)3 is a polyunsaturated fatty acid derived from the oxygenation of arachidonic acid. Leukotrienes represent a large family of lipidic molecules whose precursor, arachidonic acid, is the substrate of many biologically active molecules such as prostaglandins and thromboxanes (11), some of which have been used in the clinic for many years. The major sources of LTB4 are neutrophils and macrophages (12, 13). Important biologic properties of LTB4 are its ability to stimulate phagocyte locomotion and chemotaxis (14) and, to a lesser degree, degranulation and superoxide anion production. There are previous studies in animal models supporting the role of LTB4 in host defense against bacterial infection. In animals lacking the gene coding for the 5-lipoxygenase (5-LO), a markedly increased susceptibility to bacterial pneumonia was observed (15, 16). Furthermore, it was shown that this susceptibility to infection is the consequence of the inability of lung macrophages to produce LTB4 and to ingest and kill pathogens. Another group has shown that administration of LTB4 to mice enhances bacterial clearance (17). Interesting observations made in AIDS patients also support the role of LTB4 in host defense. It was reported that neutrophils and alveolar macrophages from HIV-infected individuals produced significantly less LTB4 than the cells of healthy subjects, and that such a defect was the cause of reduced antimicrobial activity in the phagocytes (18, 19, 20).
To investigate the potential role of LTB4 in viral infection, studies were performed using mice infected with the murine CMV (MCMV). MCMV infection in mice represents a valid surrogate model to human CMV infection and proves useful for evaluating compounds with antiviral activity due to the similarity of its gene products and the organs that are targeted during infection. MCMV is similar to human CMV with respect to the development of acute and chronic infections, latency establishment, and reactivation following immunosuppressive therapy initiation.
In this study, we report that exogenous LTB4 significantly reduces the severity of acute MCMV infection in mice and prevents viral reactivation in immunosuppressed mice following allogeneic transplantation; furthermore, we provide evidence in support of a role of endogenous 5-LO products in host defense against MCMV infection in vivo.
| Materials and Methods |
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The MCMV (Smith strain) was purchased from the American Type Culture Collection and propagated in 6-wk-old BALB/c mice. Briefly, mice were infected by i.p. injection with 103 PFU of MCMV in a volume of 0.1 ml. Twenty-one days after infection, mice were sacrificed, and the salivary glands were harvested, pooled, and homogenized in 10 ml of DMEM for 45 s using a tissue tearor apparatus (Fisher Scientific) at a setting of 5. Homogenates were centrifuged at 3000 x g for 20 min. Clarified supernatants were collected, pooled, aliquoted, and stored frozen at 150°C until used.
MCMV titer was determined by plaque assay on murine embryonic fibroblasts (MEF). MEF cell suspensions were obtained following overnight tryptic digestion (4°C) of 15-day-old BALB/c embryos. The MEF cells were counted, aliquoted (1 x 107 cells/vial), and stored frozen at 150°C until needed. For MCMV titration experiments, MEF were seeded in 12-well tissue culture plates (5 x 104 cells/well) 1 day before the titration assay. MCMV samples to be assayed were serially diluted in DMEM medium and added (0.5 ml) in duplicate onto fibroblasts for 1 h at 37°C. Nonadsorbed viruses were removed, and the cell layers were covered with culture medium containing 1.5% methylcellulose and 2% FBS. After 4 days, the medium was removed, and the cells were fixed with 5% formaldehyde in saline and stained with violet crystal. After saline washes, the cultures were examined by microscopy, and the number of plaques was determined.
Drugs
LTB4 (Cascade Biochem) was obtained as an ethanolic solution of the acid form and stored at 80°C. The dosing solutions were prepared by dilution of the ethanolic LTB4 solution in a 0.45% w/v NaCl solution containing 0.25% w/v dextrose and 0.01% w/v BSA (fraction V; ICN), no more than 1 h before injection. The solutions were warmed to 20°C before injection to prevent a shock to the animal. The following drugs were used: ganciclovir, cyclosporin A (McKessen), FK-506 (Omega), cyclophosphamide (Sigma-Aldrich), and MK-886, an inhibitor of 5-LO-activating protein (FLAP) (Biomol Research Lab).
Survival challenge
Adult female BALB/c mice (68 wk old) were infected (n = 15/group) by i.v. administration of a lethal dose of MCMV (12,000 PFU). Starting on the day of infection and every day thereafter, mice received a placebo or varying quantity of LTB4 (50 or 500 ng/kg) by i.v. administration. Survival of mice was recorded every day for each group until day 9 postinfection, at which time all surviving animals were sacrificed. Body weight loss and body temperature were also evaluated on a daily basis.
Infection of mice with MCMV and viral load determination
Adult female BALB/c mice were infected (n = 10/group) by i.v. injection in the tail vein with a sublethal dose (500 PFU) of MCMV in a final volume of 0.1 ml of DMEM and treated with exogenous LTB4. Mice were treated daily, starting on the third day of infection, with a placebo or varying quantities of LTB4 (0.5500 ng/kg). On day 12 postinfection, the salivary glands of mice were harvested and stored frozen (80°C). To evaluate the role of endogenous LTB4 in MCMV-infected animals, two different experiments were performed. First, 5-LO knockout mice (5-LO/) (The Jackson Laboratory) that were deficient for leukotriene synthesis, as well as their wild-type controls (5-LO+/+) were infected with MCMV and studied for their ability to control infection. Second, MCMV viral loads were studied in MK-886-treated BALB/c mice and compared with that of placebo-treated group. The viral loads were determined after homogenization of the organs by standard plaque assay titration on MEF cells as described above.
Effects of long-term LTB4 administration on allogeneic stem cell engraftment
Adult (68 wk old) female BALB/c mice (H2-Kd) were treated twice (days 5 and 3 relative to transplant) with cyclophosphamide (60 mg/kg). On day 0, mice were irradiated (600 rad) and reconstituted by i.v. injection with 107 allogeneic bone marrow cells (106 CD34+ equivalent) obtained from the femurs of C57BL/6 mice (H2-Kb). Transplanted mice were immunosuppressed by daily administration of cyclosporin A (5 mg/kg) starting on the day before reconstitution up to day 59. From days 60 to 100, the immunosuppressive pharmacology was switched to FK-506 (90 µg/kg). Starting on the fifth day posttransplant, mice (n = 10/group) received a placebo or LTB4 (50500 ng/kg) by i.v. administration, three times a week. On day 100 postengraftment, mice were sacrificed by CO2 asphyxiation. Bone marrow cell suspensions were obtained by flushing the marrow of the femur of each mouse with 2 ml of culture medium and analyzed for the presence of donor cells. In brief, one million bone marrow cells were incubated with a fluorescein-labeled isotype control mAb or with a fluorescein-labeled anti-H2-Kb+ Ab. After a 1-h incubation at 4°C, the cells were washed twice with 10 ml of saline and resuspended in 0.5 ml of 1% paraformadehyde. The presence of progenitor stem cell originating from the donor mouse was determined using a combination of a fluorescein-labeled anti-H2-Kb+ Ab and a PE-labeled anti-CD34 mAb. The percentage of positive cells was determined after counting 10,000 events using a flow cytometer (Epics XL; Coulter).
Effects of LTB4 administration on MCMV reactivation following allogeneic splenocyte transplantation
Adult (68 wk old) female BALB/c mice (H2-Kd) were treated twice with cyclophosphamide (150 mg/kg) and injected i.p. with 108 splenocytes from latently CMV-infected C57BL/6 (H2-Kb) mice. Latency was established by infecting the mice by i.p. injection with 104 PFU of MCMV 2 mo prior. Latency was confirmed by the absence of active CMV infection in spleen cells. BALB/c mice carrying the allogeneic splenocytes were divided into four groups of 10 mice and treated by i.v. injection, three times a week, with a placebo or LTB4 (5, 50, and 500 ng/kg). Twenty-one days following splenocyte injection, mice were sacrificed, and the salivary glands were collected and analyzed for CMV viral loads by standard plaque assay on MEF as described above.
Effects of LTB4 administration on CMV reactivation following allogeneic bone marrow transplantation
Adult (68 wk old) female BALB/c (H2-Kd) and C57BL/6 (H2-Kb) were infected with MCMV (104 PFU) by i.p. injection. Six months later, when MCMV infection was fully latent, BALB/c mice were treated twice (days 4 and 2) with cyclophosphamide (60 mg/kg) and irradiated with 600 rad on day 0. Irradiated mice were reconstituted (day 0) by i.v. injection of 107 allogeneic bone marrow cells (106 CD34+ equivalent) obtained from the femurs of C57BL/6 mice. Transplanted mice were maintained under immunosuppressive therapy by daily administration of FK-506 (90 µg/kg) starting on the day following reconstitution up to day +35. Starting on day +21, mice received a daily i.v. injection of LTB4 (50 and 500 ng/kg) (for a total of 14 days). On day +36, BALB/c transplanted mice were sacrificed, and the MCMV viral load in salivary glands was determined as described above.
| Results |
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First, we evaluated whether LTB4 administration could protect mice against a lethal MCMV infection. Mice were infected with a lethal dose of MCMV and treated by i.v. injection of LTB4. Animal survival was monitored daily. In general, mice started showing signs of infection on the second day, and mortality was observed between days 5 and 7. By the eight or ninth day postinfection, surviving mice had recovered, and the protocols were ended. Results obtained clearly show that doses of 50 and 500 ng/kg/day of LTB4 had significant protective effects on CMV-induced mortality (Fig. 1A). Typically, when administration of LTB4 (50 and 500 ng/kg/day) started on the day of infection and everyday thereafter, more than twice as many mice survived the lethal viral challenge compared with the placebo-treated group. In addition, body weight and temperature of infected mice were also monitored daily in placebo and LTB4-treated mice. During acute MCMV infection, mice typically develop a fever (3839°C) that lasts 2 days followed with a reduction in body temperature. Our results (Fig. 1B) indicate that the placebo-treated group experienced greater body temperature reduction compared with the LTB4 (5500 ng/kg)-treated mice, with the largest variations observed on day 6 postinfection. Statistically significant differences were observed on days 4, 5, 6, and 8 postinfection. In terms of body weight, infected mice started losing weight on the second day after infection and continued to do so up to the sixth day postinfection. All three groups treated with LTB4 (5500 ng/kg) experienced less severe weight losses than the placebo-treated group (Fig. 1C). Statistically significant differences (p < 0.03) were recorded between the placebo and LTB4 (50 ng/kg) group on days 7, 8, and 11 postinfection. Body weight and temperature data are therefore in accordance with the increased survival of mice treated with LTB4.
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Detection of viral particles in organs and body fluids is by far the best criteria to evaluate the spread of the infection and the efficacy of a drug. Because MCMV is known to replicate heavily in salivary glands of mice (21), viral loads were measured in this organ. Mice were infected with a sublethal dose of MCMV and treated daily with a placebo or LTB4 by i.v. injection starting on the third day of infection. On day 12, the viral loads were determined in salivary glands of mice by standard plaque assay titration on MEF cells. Results indicate that a dose of 50 ng/kg/day appeared optimal in reducing CMV viral load (66% reduction) in the salivary glands of infected mice (Fig. 2). Although less pronounced (30% reduction), a dose of 5 ng/kg/day of LTB4 also caused a reduction in CMV viral load.
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The results presented so far highlight a potential usefulness of LTB4 in the treatment of primary CMV infection. In addition to primary CMV infection, reactivation of latent CMV in transplant patients may also lead to clinical problems. Considering that bone marrow (or organ) transplant patients must receive immunosuppressive therapies, the concomitant usage of immunomodulatory drugs such as LTB4 to combat viral infections may represent a paradox. First, the next set of experiments was aimed at determining the innocuousness of prolonged i.v. administration of LTB4 on engraftment of allogeneic bone marrow cells in mice using a standard bone marrow transplant (BMT) protocol. Bone marrow cells from C57BL/6 (H2-Kb+) mice were grafted into BALB/c mice. Grafted mice received either a placebo or LTB4, at 50 or 500 ng/kg/mouse, three times a week (i.v. injection) for 100 days. The results obtained indicate that mice receiving a placebo had an identical survival rate (50%) after 100 days with those receiving LTB4. This result suggests that LTB4 administration does not promote graft-vs-host disease. Such results are in accordance with in vitro experiments demonstrating that LTB4 does not interfere with cyclosporin A or FK-506 inhibition of human T lymphocyte proliferation and IL-2 gene activation (data not shown). In addition, flow cytometric analysis of bone marrow cells from transplanted mice indicates that LTB4 administration had no negative impact on donor cell (H-2Kb+) implantation and marrow regeneration (Fig. 3A). A chimerism between cells from recipient and donor mice was observed with
50% of the cells originating from the donor mouse. Donor cells present within the marrow of recipient mice were further analyzed relative to the composition of hemopoietic bone marrow progenitors (CD34+/H2-Kb+). The analyses performed indicate that LTB4 administration for 100 days, had no negative impact on donor stem cell survival and engraftment (Fig. 3B).
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Effects of LTB4 administration on MCMV reactivation following allogeneic splenocyte or bone marrow transplantation
Having determined that LTB4 does not negatively influence stem cell engraftment, we wanted to test the effects of LTB4 on CMV reactivation. As mentioned above, one common problem associated with allogeneic transplantation is the reactivation of latent CMV following the transplant. In an attempt to mimic these events, 32 adult CMV naive BALB/c mice were treated with cyclophosphamide and injected i.p. with 100 million splenocytes from latently MCMV-infected C57BL/6 (H2kb) mice. Mice were divided in four groups and treated by i.v. injection with a placebo or LTB4 (5, 50, or 500 ng/kg) three times a week for 3 wk. The salivary glands were taken from each mouse and assayed for CMV viral load by standard plaque assay. The results obtained indicate (Fig. 4A) that eight of eight mice that were treated with the placebo had detectable CMV viral load in their salivary glands. Because recipient mice were naive for CMV, the source of infection originates from the reactivation of CMV from latently infected donor spleen cells. In sharp contrast to the placebo-treated group, no active CMV infection could be detected in any of the groups of mice (0 of 24) treated with LTB4. When this experiment was repeated, 33% of the placebo group reactivated MCMV, compared with 16, 0, and 8% for mice treated with 5, 50, and 500 ng/kg of LTB4, respectively (data not shown).
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Protective effect of endogenous 5-LO products in MCMV-infected mice
In the experiments presented above, we have shown that administration of exogenous LTB4 to infected mice enhances resistance to MCMV infection. This suggests that LTB4 may play an important role in the natural antiviral immunity. To support this hypothesis, we used 5-LO knockout (5-LO/) mice, which are unable to produce endogenous leukotrienes. Mice were infected with MCMV, and viral load was assayed in salivary glands on day 12 postinfection. As shown in Fig. 5A, 5-LO/ animals have higher viral loads in salivary glands (an increase of 93%), compared with the wild-type (5-LO+/+) controls. To further support the role of endogenous 5-LO products as putative mediators of the antiviral defense, another set of experiments was performed. MCMV-infected BALB/c mice were treated daily for 11 days starting on the day of infection with MK-886, an inhibitor of FLAP, a protein shown to be essential to leukotriene biosynthesis. On day 12 postinfection, viral load measurements in the salivary glands indicate that MK-886-treated mice had significantly higher MCMV viral loads (an increase of 233%) (Fig. 5B) compared with that of the placebo-treated group.
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| Discussion |
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The mechanism(s) of action of LTB4 in vivo as antiviral is (are) not yet elucidated. LTB4 may activate several effector functions of lymphocytes and NK cells, two important players of the antiviral immunity. LTB4 enhances IL-2 synthesis by CD4+ T cells (25) and increases expression of IL-2Rs on CD8+ T cells (26) favoring their proliferation. Similarly, the expression of IL-2Rs is also increased on NK cells by LTB4, resulting in an increased responsiveness to IL-2 and greater cytotoxic activity. More recently, it was reported that LTB4 mediates migration of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells out of the lymphoid compartment and their recruitment into peripheral tissues (27, 28). LTB4 was also found to act on B cells by enhancing their activation, proliferation, and Ig secretion (29, 30). Thus, these observations substantiate a potential role of LTB4 as activator of cytotoxic cells, which are known to be involved in the killing of infected cells. In the allogeneic transplantation protocols presented in our study, we show that viral reactivation in latently MCMV-infected recipients was much less frequently observed in animals treated with LTB4. Latently infected mice have developed immune memory T and B cells. Thus, we speculate that such effector functions may have been potentiated in mice treated with LTB4, promoting resistance to MCMV reactivation.
Such an activation of lymphocyte effector functions involves Ag processing and the generation of Ag-specific effector cells. This process requires a certain amount of time following infection to be effective and, thus, does not participate to the early response against viral infection. LTB4 is also known to be a potent activator of phagocytes such as neutrophils, a cell type associated with the nonspecific defense. Activation of neutrophils is an early event of the immune response. Neutrophils are rapidly mobilized, and their number and distribution throughout the body ensures that they are often the first leukocytes to encounter invading organisms. In addition to neutrophil recruitment, LTB4 stimulates their phagocytic activity, the formation of reactive oxygen species (31), and the release of granular enzymes (32). Although we cannot overlook that an effective Ag-specific response could be involved, the activation of neutrophils is probably the main mechanism by which LTB4 exerts its antiviral activity within the first days of the infection. For example, in studies using animals infected with a lethal dose of MCMV and treated with LTB4 (500 ng/kg) on the day of infection and every day thereafter, no mortality was observed within 7 days postinfection (at least 80% mortality was observed in the placebo group), suggesting a rapid activation of the innate immune response. Furthermore, in naive mice injected i.p. with splenocytes from latently MCMV-infected mice and treated with LTB4, no active MCMV infection has been detected in salivary glands in contrast to the placebo group. In these experiments, we can argue that the viral spread was rapidly controlled by LTB4-stimulated phagocytes in the peritoneal cavity. This assumption is supported by previous studies showing that alveolar macrophages and neutrophils from mice unable to produce leukotrienes demonstrated a reduced ability to phagocytose and kill bacteria. This impairment (defective phagocytosis) could be overcome by treatment with exogenous LTB4 (15, 33). In this respect, our experiments using 5-LO knockout mice infected with MCMV show that leukotriene-deficient mice have a higher viral load in salivary glands compared with the wild-type mice. Viral loads were also found to be higher in animals treated with MK-886, a potent FLAP antagonist and inhibitor of leukotriene synthesis, further supporting a critical role of 5-LO products, possibly LTB4, in host defense against infectious agents.
Another mechanism triggered by LTB4 that likely contributes to its antiviral activity is the release of antimicrobial proteins called
-defensins (reviewed in Ref.13). These molecules are polypeptides that can nonspecifically disrupt the membrane of various microorganisms including bacteria, protozoa, and viruses. Epithelial cells and monocytes can produce
-defensins, but the main producers are neutrophils. Recent studies have demonstrated the anti-HIV activity of defensins, thus stimulating the interest for these mediators of the innate immunity (34, 35). In a recent clinical trial (phase I) aiming to evaluate the safety and tolerability of i.v. administered LTB4 to humans, we observed that LTB4 was a potent inducer of
-defensin release with a maximal plasma concentration at 2 h post-LTB4 injection (36). The release of
-defensins by LTB4-activated neutrophils may then represent another mechanism that contributes to viral clearance. However, the relative antiviral contributions of
-defensins in our murine models of CMV infections remain to be determined considering that it is reported that neutrophils from mice do not contain or secrete such antimicrobial peptides (37).
The present study clearly shows that administration of LTB4 reduces the viral loads in MCMV-infected mice and prevents MCMV reactivation in latently infected mice following allogeneic bone marrow transplantation. By stimulating leukocyte recruitment and a wide range of effector functions of both the innate and the adaptive immunity, LTB4 behaves as a potent immunomodulator with a great potential for the prevention and the treatment of viral infections.
| Footnotes |
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1 J.G. is a Senior Scholar from the Fonds de la Recherche en Santé du Québec (FRSQ), and L.F. is a Junior 2 Scholar from the FRSQ. ![]()
2 Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Jean Gosselin, Laboratory of Viral Immunology, Rheumatology and Immunology Research Center, Centre Hospitalier de lUniversité Laval Research Center (Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Québec), Room T 1-49, 2705 boulevard Laurier, Sainte-Foy (Québec), G1V 4G2 Canada. E-mail address: jean.gosselin{at}crchul.ulaval.ca ![]()
3 Abbreviations used in this paper: LTB4, leukotriene B4; 5-LO, 5-lipoxygenase; MCMV, murine CMV; MEF, murine embryonic fibroblast; FLAP, 5-LO-activating protein; BMT, bone marrow transplant. ![]()
Received for publication May 19, 2004. Accepted for publication November 12, 2004.
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