Science. 1997 Jun 27;276(5321):2030-3. Unique Identifier : AIDSLINE
Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) is a human lymphocryptovirus that causes
infectious mononucleosis, persists asymptomatically for life in nearly
all adults, and is associated with the development of B cell lymphomas
and nasopharyngeal carcinomas. A highly similar rhesus lymphocryptovirus
naturally endemic in rhesus monkeys was used to orally infect naive
animals from a pathogen-free colony. This animal model reproduced key
aspects of human EBV infection, including oral transmission, atypical
lymphocytosis, lymphadenopathy, activation of CD23(+) peripheral blood B
cells, sustained serologic responses to lytic and latent EBV antigens,
latent infection in the peripheral blood, and virus persistence in
oropharyngeal secretions. This system may be useful for studying the
pathogenesis, prevention, and treatment of EBV infection and associated
oncogenesis.
*Disease Models, Animal *Herpesviridae Infections/IMMUNOLOGY
*Herpesviridae Infections/PATHOLOGY *Herpesviridae Infections/VIROLOGY
*Herpesvirus 4, Human *Lymphocryptovirus/IMMUNOLOGY
*Lymphocryptovirus/ISOLATION & PURIF *Macaca mulatta *Tumor Virus
Infections/IMMUNOLOGY *Tumor Virus Infections/PATHOLOGY *Tumor Virus
Infections/VIROLOGY
www.aegis.org