Early B-cell activation after West Nile virus infection requires alpha/beta interferon but not antigen receptor signaling

WE Purtha, KA Chachu, HW Virgin IV… - Journal of …, 2008 - Am Soc Microbiol
WE Purtha, KA Chachu, HW Virgin IV, MS Diamond
Journal of virology, 2008Am Soc Microbiol
The B-cell response against West Nile virus (WNV), an encephalitic Flavivirus of global
concern, is critical to controlling central nervous system dissemination and neurological
sequelae, including death. Here, using a well-characterized mouse model of WNV infection,
we examine the factors that govern early B-cell activation. Subcutaneous inoculation with a
low dose of replicating WNV results in extensive B-cell activation in the draining lymph node
(LN) within days of infection as judged by upregulation of the surface markers CD69, class II …
Abstract
The B-cell response against West Nile virus (WNV), an encephalitic Flavivirus of global concern, is critical to controlling central nervous system dissemination and neurological sequelae, including death. Here, using a well-characterized mouse model of WNV infection, we examine the factors that govern early B-cell activation. Subcutaneous inoculation with a low dose of replicating WNV results in extensive B-cell activation in the draining lymph node (LN) within days of infection as judged by upregulation of the surface markers CD69, class II major histocompatibility complex, and CD86 on CD19+ cells. B-cell activation in the LN but not the spleen was dependent on signals through the type I alpha/beta interferon (IFN-α/β) receptor. Despite significant activation in the draining LN at day 3 after infection, WNV-specific B cells were not detected by immunoglobulin M enzyme-linked immunospot analysis until day 7. Liposome depletion experiments demonstrate that B-cell activation after WNV infection was not affected by the loss of F4/80+ or CD169+ subcapsular macrophages. Nonetheless, LN myeloid cells were essential for control of viral replication and survival from infection. Overall, our data suggest that the massive, early polyclonal B-cell activation occurring in the draining LN after WNV infection is immunoglobulin receptor and macrophage independent but requires sustained signals through the type I IFN-α/β receptor.
American Society for Microbiology