Litcius/Paper detail

Measles immunity and immunosuppression

Diane E. Griffin

2020Current Opinion in Virology64 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Effects of measles on the immune system are only partially understood. Lymphoid tissue is a primary site of measles virus (MeV) replication where CD150 is the receptor for infection of both B and T cells. Lymphocyte depletion occurs during the acute phase of infection, but initiation of the adaptive immune response leads to extensive lymphocyte proliferation, production of MeV-specific antibody and T cells, the rash and clearance of infectious virus. Viral RNA persists in lymphoid tissue accompanied by ongoing germinal center proliferation, production of antibody-secreting cells, functionally distinct populations of T cells and antibody avidity maturation to establish life-long immunity. However, at the same time diversity of pre-existing antibodies and numbers of memory and naive B cells are reduced and susceptibility to other infections is increased.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyGerminal centerImmunologyMeasles virusImmune systemVirologyAntibodyImmunityAcquired immune systemMeaslesVirusVaccinationB cellVirology and Viral DiseasesAnimal Virus Infections StudiesSARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19 Research