Production of atypical measles in rhesus macaques: evidence for disease mediated by immune complex formation and eosinophils in the presence of fusion-inhibiting …

FP Polack, PG Auwaerter, SH Lee, HC Nousari… - Nature medicine, 1999 - nature.com
FP Polack, PG Auwaerter, SH Lee, HC Nousari, A Valsamakis, KM Leiferman, A Diwan…
Nature medicine, 1999nature.com
The severe disease atypical measles occurred when individuals immunized with a poorly
protective inactivated vaccine contracted measles, and was postulated to be due to a lack of
fusion-inhibiting antibodies. Here, rhesus macaques immunized with formalin-inactivated
measles vaccine developed transient neutralizing and fusion-inhibiting antibodies, but no
cytotoxic T-cell response. Subsequent infection with measles virus caused an atypical rash
and pneumonitis, accompanied by immune complex deposition and an increase in …
Abstract
The severe disease atypical measles occurred when individuals immunized with a poorly protective inactivated vaccine contracted measles, and was postulated to be due to a lack of fusion-inhibiting antibodies. Here, rhesus macaques immunized with formalin-inactivated measles vaccine developed transient neutralizing and fusion-inhibiting antibodies, but no cytotoxic T-cell response. Subsequent infection with measles virus caused an atypical rash and pneumonitis, accompanied by immune complex deposition and an increase in eosinophils. Fusion-inhibiting antibody appeared earlier in these monkeys than in non-immunized monkeys. These data indicate that atypical measles results from previous priming for a nonprotective type 2 CD4 T-cell response rather than from lack of functional antibody against the fusion protein.
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