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Interferon inducers as antiviral agents

Authors :
Stringfellow, Dale Alan
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
University of Utah, 2012.

Abstract

Studies were undertaken to investigate factors which might influence the efficacy of interferon induces as antiviral agents. Initially, the kinetics of the interferon response induced in mice by poly I:C and tilorone hydrochloride was determined. The interferon response following oral administration of tilorone was unusually delayed and prolonged when compared with most synthetic inducers such a poly I:C but could not be explained on the bases of time required for absorption of the drug from the G.I. tract. Furthermore, although lymphatic tissue had been suggested to be a primary cell involved in the tilorone induced interferon response, treatment of mice with anti-lymphocyte serum had not effect on their ability to produce interferon in response to tilorone. These results indicated that lymphatic tissue were not critical in the tilorone induced interferon response as anticipated. Mice infected with Semliki Forest Virus or encephalomyocarditis (EMC) virus developed a progressive state of hyporeactivity to interferon induction. By 96 hours after infection with either virus, a time when symptoms of illness were first detectable, an 80 to 95% suppression of the interferon response could be demonstrated with all of the interferon inducers examined in these studies. This hyporeactive state was postulated to be one possible explanation for the observation that interferon inducers are less effective as antiviral agents when administered after the onset of the infection. Studies designed to evaluate the therapeutic efficacy of single or multiple injections of tilorone hydrochloride or poly I:C indicated that in order to successfully protect infected mice from the lethal consequences of EMC virus infection, suppression of a detectable viremia was essential. The viremia could be delayed or partially suppressed without protection. The data strongly suggest that once the CNS has been seeded and virus replication had begun inducer therapy was ineffective in altering the outcome of infection. This could in art be attributed to the low levels of interferon found in brain tissue following intraperitoneal administration of poly I:C. Also, animals which received the most effective treatment regimen of interferon inducers and survived the infection had a reduced incidence of circulating, neutralizing antibody. This reduction in the incidence of antibody in surviving mice was correlated with suppression of detectable viremia and presumably with prevention of sufficient antigenic stimulation to initiate the natural antibody response.

Subjects

Subjects :
Leukocytes
Exogenous

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........0b45ea705842142744cd7dfe7b6908de
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.26053/0h-7gmw-j6g0