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From the Departments of Pediatrics
* and Pathology,
University of Michigan Medical School, and the Department of Epidemiology,
University of Michigan
School of Public Health, Ann Arbor, Michigan; and the Department of
Immunology and the Walther Oncology
Center,
Indiana University School
of Medicine, Indianapolis, Indiana
Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is a respiratory pathogen that can cause significant morbidity in infants and young children. Interestingly, the majority of children who acquire a RSV infection do not exhibit severe symptoms. Development of a Th1 response has been associated with resolution of symptoms in viral infections and may explain mild RSV illness. The current study investigated the cytokine response observed in mild disease in C57BL/6 mice that had low airway resistance and mucus production with little pulmonary inflammation. RSV infection in these mice was accompanied by a fourfold increase in interleukin-12(IL-12). Treatment of RSV-infected mice with anti-IL-12 resulted in an increase in airway hyperreactivity, mucus production, and airway inflammation (eosinophilia). Since IL-12 activation is dependent on Stat-4-mediated intracellular signal transduction, similar experiments were performed in Stat-4 deficient mice and demonstrated similar results to those obtained from anti-IL-12 treated mice. Again, there was an increase in airway hyperreactivity and mucus production, and goblet cell hypertrophy. These studies support the importance of IL-12 in the immune response to RSV infection resulting in resolution of disease and protection from inappropriate inflammatory responses.
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