Characterization of a Live-Attenuated Retroviral Vaccine Demonstrates Protection via Immune Mechanisms

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1 JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY, Aug. 1998, p Vol. 72, No X/98/$ Copyright 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved. Characterization of a Live-Attenuated Retroviral Vaccine Demonstrates Protection via Immune Mechanisms ULF DITTMER,* DIANE M. BROOKS, AND KIM J. HASENKRUG Laboratory of Persistent Viral Diseases, Rocky Mountain Laboratories, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, Hamilton, Montana Received 16 March 1998/Accepted 11 May 1998 Live-attenuated retroviruses have been shown to be effective retroviral vaccines, but currently little is known regarding the mechanisms of protection. In the present studies, we used Friend virus as a model to analyze characteristics of a live-attenuated vaccine in protection against virus-induced disease. Highly susceptible mice were immunized with nonpathogenic Friend murine leukemia helper virus (F-MuLV), which replicates poorly in adult mice. Further attenuation of the vaccine virus was achieved by crossing the Fv-1 genetic resistance barrier. The minimum dose of vaccine virus required to protect 100% of the mice against challenge with pathogenic Friend virus complex was determined to be 10 3 focus-forming units of attenuated virus. Live vaccine virus was necessary for induction of immunity, since inactivated F-MuLV did not induce protection. To determine whether immune cells mediated protection, spleen cells from vaccinated donor mice were adoptively transferred into syngeneic recipients. The results indicated that immune mechanisms rather than viral interference mediated protection. Live-attenuated viruses are successfully used for preventing virus-induced diseases such as measles, mumps, rubella, and polio. Since the discovery of retroviruses such as human T-cell leukemia virus and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) that cause diseases in humans, biomedical researchers have been interested in designing live-attenuated vaccines for retroviruses as well. In recent experiments, monkeys were protected by live-attenuated simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) against challenge with pathogenic SIV isolates (1, 13, 36). However, the mechanism of protection is not understood, and there has even been a question regarding whether protection was immunologically based. While it is not theoretically necessary to understand how a vaccine works in order to use it, there are numerous safety concerns involved in the use of live-attenuated retroviruses as a vaccine. Thus, it would be beneficial to establish the basic parameters regarding protection by liveattenuated retroviruses, and the most useful animals for such studies are mice. Since there is currently no mouse model for HIV infection, we have initiated studies using Friend virus (FV), a murine retrovirus that causes immunosuppression and erythroleukemia in adult mice. Although there are major differences between the diseases caused by FV and HIV, it is possible that the basic requirements for vaccine protection against retroviruses are very similar. FV is a retroviral complex comprised of a replication-competent helper virus, Friend murine leukemia virus (F-MuLV), and a replication-defective spleen focus-forming virus (SFFV) (22). In susceptible adult animals, FV induces rapid polyclonal erythroblast proliferation (19, 24), followed within 3 to 4 weeks by the immortalization of erythroid cells (12, 28, 30, 38). FV infections cause profound splenomegaly, abnormally high hematocrits (greater than 80%), and lethal erythroleukemias in most strains of mice. In several different vaccination experiments, protective immunity against FV has been achieved by * Corresponding author. Mailing address: Laboratory of Persistent Viral Diseases, Rocky Mountain Laboratories, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, 903 S. 4th St., Hamilton, MT Phone: (406) Fax: (406) udittmer@atlas.niaid.nih.gov. using killed virus with adjuvants (21, 29), isolated viral proteins (20, 21), recombinant viral vectors expressing FV proteins (15, 17), and live-attenuated vaccines (15, 25). In contrast to vaccination with vaccinia virus vectors, live-attenuated virus is highly protective, even in mouse strains that have poor immunological responsiveness to FV because of their major histocompatibility complex (MHC) haplotype (15). In previous experiments with live-attenuated FV, attenuation was achieved by crossing a host genetic resistance barrier called Fv-1. Successful replication of virus in Fv-1-resistant cells in vitro requires at least 100-fold more virus than in Fv-1-compatible cells (32). Likewise, induction of disease in Fv-1-incompatible mice requires much higher doses of virus than are required in Fv-1-compatible strains (25). Thus, inoculation of 1,500 focus-forming units (FFU) of N-tropic FV (FV-N) complex induces rapid erythroleukemia in DBA/2 (Fv- 1 n/n ) mice, but not in A.BY (Fv-1 b/b ) mice. In addition, after infection with FV-N, Fv-1 b/b mice are subsequently protected from challenge with B-tropic FV (FV-B) complex (15, 25). Although such vaccination has been shown to generate virusspecific B-cells, cytotoxic T cells (CTLs), and helper T cells (TH) (15), the role of these immune cells in protection has not been established. In fact, evidence indicates that in Fv-1-compatible neonatal mice, protection by live-attenuated vaccines occurs through viral interference rather than immunological mechanisms (11, 12, 26). The present paper establishes that only the F-MuLV helper component of the FV-N complex is required for effective vaccination and demonstrates that protection by F-MuLV in adult mice is primarily mediated by immune cells rather than viral interference. MATERIALS AND METHODS Mice. (B10.A A/Wy)F 1 mice 3 to 6 months of age at experimental onset were used. F 1 parental strain mice were obtained from the Jackson Laboratories. Breeding of F 1 strains was done at Rocky Mountain Laboratories. All mice were treated in accordance with National Institutes of Health regulations and the guidelines of the Animal Care and Use Committee of Rocky Mountain Laboratories. Virus vaccination and virus challenge. The FV-B complex used in these experiments was from uncloned virus stocks obtained from 10% spleen cell 6554

2 VOL. 72, 1998 LIVE-ATTENUATED FRIEND VIRUS VACCINE 6555 homogenates from BALB/c mice infected 9 days previously with polycythemiainducing FV stocks originally obtained from Frank Lilly (10, 15). The N-tropic F-MuLV (stock 29-51N) (6) was a 24-h supernatant from infected Mus dunni cells (23). Mice were vaccinated by intravenous injection of 0.5 ml of phosphatebuffered, balanced salt solution (PBBS) (9) containing 2% fetal bovine serum and 10 4 FFU of N-tropic F-MuLV vaccine virus. Heat inactivation of the F- MuLV vaccine was performed by 1hofincubation in a 56 C water bath. In virus challenge experiments, mice were injected intravenously with 0.5 ml of PBBS containing 2% fetal bovine serum and 1,500 spleen FFU (SFFU) of FV-B complex. Splenomegaly as a measure of Friend disease. Palpation for splenomegaly is the standard procedure used to monitor the progression of Friend disease (10, 15, 31) and was used in the following manner. At weekly intervals, each individual animal under general anesthesia was palpated in a blinded fashion and rated on a scale of 1 to 4 according to its spleen size. Normal (1 ) spleen weights range from 0.1 to 0.25 g. Spleens greater than twice normal size (more than 0.4 g), but not large enough to reach the ventral midline, were rated as 2. Spleens that weigh between 0.25 and 0.4 g were still rated as 1. If spleens were large enough to reach the ventral midline, they were rated as 3 (weight of between 0.8 and 1.6 g). Spleens which extended across the abdominal midline and caused protrusion of the abdominal wall were rated as 4 (weight greater than 1.6 g). Cross-checking of actual spleen weights with spleen sizes determined by palpations has demonstrated consistency in differentiation of spleens weighing in the normal range from those weighing greater than 0.4 g (2 ) (reference 5) and our unpublished data). Mice that have sustained splenomegaly by 8 weeks postinfection begin to die about 10 weeks postinfection, and most are dead by 16 weeks postinfection. In contrast, mice which recover from splenomegaly live normal life spans (5, 10). Viremia and virus-neutralizing antibody assays. For viremia assays, freshly frozen plasma samples were titrated by focal infectivity assays (35) on susceptible M. dunni cells pretreated with 4 g of Polybrene per ml. Cultures were incubated for 5 days, fixed with ethanol, stained with F-MuLV envelope-specific monoclonal antibody 720 (33), and developed with goat anti-mouse peroxidase-conjugated antisera (Cappel, West Chester, Pa.) and aminoethylcarbazol to detect foci. To test plasma samples for virus-neutralizing antibodies, heat-inactivated (56 C, 10 min) samples at titrated dilutions were incubated with virus stock in the presence of complement at 37 C as previously described (29). The samples were then plated as described for the viremia assay to determine the dilution at which 75% of the virus had been neutralized. Infectious center assays. Titrations of single-cell suspensions from persistently infected mouse spleens were plated onto susceptible M. dunni cells (23), cocultivated for 5 days, fixed with ethanol, stained with F-MuLV envelope-specific monoclonal antibody 720 (33), and developed with peroxidase-conjugated goat anti-mouse antibodies and aminoethylcarbazol to detect foci. Adoptive spleen cell transfer. For the transfer experiments, (B10.A A/Wy)F 1 mice (Fv-1 b/b ) were vaccinated by infection with 10 4 FFU of liveattenuated N-tropic F-MuLV. After 30 days, spleen cells from these mice were adoptively transferred to naive syngeneic animals via tail vein injection. Each mouse received spleen cells in 0.75 ml of PBBS. Cell suspensions were depleted of erythroid cells and filtered through a nylon screen to remove chunks. The PBBS was supplemented with 15 U of heparin per ml. One day later, the recipients were challenged with 1,500 SFFU of FV-B complex. Controls received either (i) spleen cells from naive mice, (ii) spleen cells taken from animals 3 days post-f-mulv vaccination, or (iii) 10 4 FFU of N-tropic F-MuLV alone before challenge 1 day later. After FV-B challenge, the recipients were palpated weekly for virus-induced splenomegaly. Statistical comparisons of groups of mice that received spleen cells from F-MuLV-inoculated donor animals 3 or 30 days after vaccination were performed with Fisher s exact test of chi-square analysis. RESULTS Protection of Fv-1 b/b mice with N-tropic F-MuLV. Previous studies describing a live-attenuated FV vaccine used the FV- N complex composed of N-tropic F-MuLV helper virus and SFFV (15). However, FV-N is pathogenic, depending on the virus dose and mouse strain used, while F-MuLV alone is nonpathogenic in adult mice. We wished to determine if F- MuLV alone could be used to provide protection, thereby reducing the pathogenic potential of the vaccine and eliminating SFFV as an immunological variable. To this end, highly susceptible (B10.A A/Wy)F 1 (Fv-1 b/b ) mice were vaccinated by infection with 10 4 FFU of N-tropic F-MuLV. A control group of animals was inoculated with the same dose of heatinactivated virus. At 1 month postvaccination, the mice were challenged with pathogenic FV-B complex, and the animals were examined weekly for virus-induced splenomegaly. All 18 animals that were vaccinated with live F-MuLV were protected FIG. 1. F-MuLV vaccine-induced protection from FV-induced splenomegaly in FV-1 b/b mice. Age-matched (B10.A A/Wy)F 1 mice were vaccinated with N-tropic live-attenuated F-MuLV ( ) or heat inactivated F-MuLV ( ). The mice were challenged 1 month later with a high dose (1,500 SFFU) of FV-B complex and monitored for induction and progression of splenomegaly. For live F-MuLV-vaccinated mice, n 18; for inactivated F-MuLV-vaccinated mice, n 16; and for naive controls (F), n 20. from splenomegaly during the 8-week observation period after FV-B challenge (Fig. 1). Furthermore, they were also protected against a second FV-B challenge 3 months later (data not shown). In contrast, all 16 mice immunized with inactivated F-MuLV developed splenomegaly within 2 weeks after infection, and more than 80% of the animals had to be euthanized within 8 weeks because of FV-induced erythroleukemia (Fig. 1). Thus, the helper component alone was sufficient for protection against FV-induced disease. Furthermore, in vivo infection and, perhaps, replication were required to induce protective immunity. Viremia and virus-neutralizing antibodies in vaccinated mice. To determine if vaccination had limited the challenge infection sufficiently to prevent viremia, plasma samples from immunized animals were tested for the presence of free virus. Infectious virus was detected 7 days after FV-B challenge in the blood of unvaccinated animals and animals inoculated with inactivated virus (Fig. 2A). In contrast, animals vaccinated with live F-MuLV had no measurable viremia at the same time point. Since it has been previously shown that viremia in FV infection is controlled by virus-neutralizing antibodies (4, 8), the titers of neutralizing antibodies in the groups vaccinated with live or inactivated virus were determined. Virus-neutralizing antibody titers ranging from 1/40 to 1/160 were found in the sera from mice that had received the live vaccine virus (Fig. 2B). In contrast, mice immunized with inactivated virus had no detectable virus-neutralizing antibody titers. Thus, vaccination with live F-MuLV induced production of virus-neutralizing antibody and prevented the spread of virus to the blood. Determination of the minimal viral dose for efficient F- MuLV vaccination. To determine the minimal live-attenuated F-MuLV viral dose required to induce protection, (B10.A A/Wy)F 1 mice were inoculated with various amounts of the vaccine virus. Groups of animals vaccinated with either 10 4

3 6556 DITTMER ET AL. J. VIROL. TABLE 1. Detection of vaccine virus at various time points after F-MuLV inoculation No. of ICs/10 7 spleen cells at postvaccination day a a Determined after inoculation with 10 4 FFU of F-MuLV. FIG. 2. Plasma viremia and virus-neutralizing antibodies in N-tropic F- MuLV-vaccinated and FV-B-challenged mice. (A) Plasma samples were taken at 1 week postchallenge to assay for the presence of plasma viremia. The limit of detection was 220 FFU/ml of plasma. (B) The same samples were also analyzed for F-MuLV-neutralizing antibody. The neutralizing antibody titer was considered to be the highest dilution at which greater than 75% of the input virus was neutralized. Six individual animals (F) from the groups of mice vaccinated with live or inactivated F-MuLV were investigated. or 10 3 FFU of F-MuLV were completely protected against splenomegaly induced by challenge with 1,500 FFU of FV-B (Fig. 3). In contrast, at 8 weeks postchallenge, mice vaccinated with 10 1 and 10 2 FFU of F-MuLV showed 71 and 57% splenomegaly, respectively. All unvaccinated mice and mice that received 10 0 FFU of the vaccine virus developed severe splenomegaly after FV-B challenge and had to be euthanized. Thus, full protection required immunization with 10 3 FFU of F- MuLV. The level of in vivo replication of the vaccine virus was determined by measuring infectious centers (ICs) in the spleens of F-MuLV-inoculated mice. At both 3 and 10 days postinoculation with 10 4 FFU of F-MuLV, fewer than 10 3 ICs per spleen were detected (Table 1). This level of in vivo infection was very low: approximately 10,000 times less than that in the spleens of mice infected with pathogenic FV-B (15). By 30 days postvaccination with F-MuLV, only one of six mice had detectable spleen virus (Table 1), indicating that immune responses had cleared most virus. Thus, the results indicated that only low-level replication of the F-MuLV vaccine virus was required to induce protection. Transfer of F-MuLV-primed spleen cells protected syngeneic recipients against FV-B challenge. To address the question of whether F-MuLV-induced protection was due to an immunological mechanism, we performed an adoptive cell transfer experiment. Spleen cells ( ) from F-MuLVvaccinated or naive (B10.A A/Wy)F 1 mice were transferred into naive, syngeneic animals. One day later, the recipients were challenged with pathogenic FV-B. Six of nine animals receiving cells from vaccinated mice were protected against FV-induced early splenomegaly (Fig. 4). In addition, one of the three animals which had early splenomegaly later recovered from Friend disease. In contrast, all nine animals that received spleen cells from naive mice developed severe splenomegaly, and none of the mice recovered. A possible mechanism for protection by live-attenuated retroviruses is viral interference. This mechanism appeared unlikely, given that there was no detectable vaccine virus in the immune spleen cells that were transferred at 30 days post-f- MuLV vaccination (Table 1). However, as a control for passage of an interfering virus, spleen cells were transferred at 3 days postvaccination. At this time point, there was detectable vaccine virus in the spleen cells, but the immune response had not yet had time to develop. None of the mice that received spleen cells from donors at 3 days postvaccination were protected from FV-induced splenomegaly (Fig. 4). Likewise, mice that received the F-MuLV vaccine virus 1 day prior to FV-B challenge also were not protected. These results indicate that immune cells rather than viral interference mediated protection by the F-MuLV live-attenuated retroviral vaccine. FIG. 3. Titration of the F-MuLV vaccine virus. Age-matched (B10.A A/Wy)F 1 (FV-1 b/b ) mice were vaccinated with five 10-fold dilutions (10 0 to 10 4 FFU) of the N-tropic F-MuLV vaccine virus. The mice were challenged 1 month later with FV-B complex and monitored for induction and progression of splenomegaly. For vaccination with live F-MuLV, the inoculations and numbers of mice were as follows: 10 0 FFU ( ), n 7; 10 1 FFU ( ), n 7; 10 2 FFU (F), n 7; 10 3 FFU (E), n 7; 10 4 FFU ( ), n 18. For naive controls ({), n 20. DISCUSSION The current results demonstrate that the primary mechanism of protection by live-attenuated FV vaccination is immunologically mediated. There was no indication of an effect from viral interference, since vaccine virus without any immune cells did not protect adult mice against FV-induced disease. This was found for the inoculation of free virus 1 day prior to challenge, the same time point used to establish viral interference as the mechanism of protection in neonatal mice (11). To rule out the possibility that transfers of infected cells might

4 VOL. 72, 1998 LIVE-ATTENUATED FRIEND VIRUS VACCINE 6557 FIG. 4. Transfer of F-MuLV-primed spleen cells into syngeneic mice. Spleen cells ( ) from F-MuLV-vaccinated or naive (B10.A A/Wy)F 1 mice were transferred to age-matched syngeneic animals. Nine animals in each group received either spleen cells from naive mice (Œ) or spleen cells from mice vaccinated with F-MuLV 30 days prior to transfer (F). One day after transfer, the recipients were challenged with FV-B complex and monitored for virusinduced splenomegaly. Eight controls were inoculated with the F-MuLV vaccine virus 1 day prior to FV-B challenge ( ). In addition, nine animals received spleen cells from animals which were F-MuLV vaccinated only 3 days prior to the transfer (E). The difference between the groups of animals that received spleen cells 3 days postvaccination and those who received them 30 days postvaccination was statistically very significant (P 0.009, by Fisher s exact test of chi-square analysis). transfer vaccine virus more efficiently than infection with free virus, we transferred cells at 3 days postvaccination. At this time point, there was detectable virus in the transferred cells, but significant numbers of immune cells had not been generated. There was no protection conferred by transfers of infected, but nonimmune spleen cells. In contrast, immune cells that harbored no detectable F-MuLV were protective. Although these cells might have harbored an undetectable lowlevel infection, the results from our control groups make it unlikely that this contributed significantly to their protective effect. It has been shown for Fv-4-induced resistance of mice against FV that high but not low levels of FV envelope expression induced protection by an interference mechanism (26). Thus, large numbers of vaccine virus-infected target cells seem to be necessary to induce resistance against FV infection via interference. However, a minor additive effect of interference together with the immune-mediated protection by live-attenuated retroviruses cannot be ruled out. Our results are significant in that they suggest it may be possible to achieve similar protection with vectors believed to be safer than live-attenuated viruses. However, this will require much more detailed knowledge about the immunological mechanisms required for protection. For example, previous attempts to vaccinate mice against FV with recombinant vaccinia virus vectors expressing viral proteins have resulted in only limited protection dependent on the MHC type of the mouse (7, 15, 18). Recombinant vaccinia virus vectors have also been relatively unsuccessful in the SIV model (14, 16), possibly because of the nonresponsiveness of some MHC types (3). Likewise, peptide vaccines in the FV model have shown only limited protection in certain MHC types (27). Any vaccine useful for human immunization against retroviral infections must be broadly protective in multiple MHC types, as are the live-attenuated viruses. Thus, it is important to determine which characteristics of the live-attenuated viruses account for their efficacy and differentiate them from less-effective vaccines, such as vaccinia virus vectors. In the FV model, one of the known differences between vaccination with live-attenuated viruses and that with vaccinia virus vectors is that the live-attenuated viruses elicit immunological effectors, including CTLs, virus-neutralizing antibody, and CD4 T cells, while vaccinia virus vectors generally only prime for CTL and antibody responses, but do elicit CD4 T cells (15). The reasons for this remain unclear, but may be related to the duration of antigen available for immune stimulation. In the present studies, which were done with highly susceptible animals with poorly responsive MHC haplotypes, it is possible that vaccine virus persisted at levels below the limit of detection of our assay and contributed to immune protection. With sensitive PCR techniques, persistent vaccine viruses have been found in macaques vaccinated with live-attenuated SIV (37), and a chronic source of antigen may be an essential aspect of long-term protection. It will be important to address this issue more carefully in future studies. Other attributes which may contribute to the efficacy of liveattenuated viruses as vaccines include the wide range of viral proteins which are expressed, the types of immune cells responding to the infection, the specific location of viral antigen within the immunological architecture, and the degree of vaccine virus replication. These issues have broad implications for the rational design of safe and effective retroviral vaccines and must be addressed. The system described here offers the opportunity to examine these basic issues and could lead to novel vaccination methods which exploit the advantages of live-attenuated retroviruses while reducing or eliminating potential dangers. While this is obviously the preferred outcome, it may also be found that only live-attenuated retroviruses stimulate the specific types of immune responses uniquely required for retroviral protection. The critical issue then becomes how to make a safe live-attenuated retrovirus. Many of the safety issues, such as reversion to virulence, insertional mutagenesis, and recombination with endogenous or exogenous retroviral sequences, are frequency dependent and are related to levels of infection and virus replication. Thus, it may be possible to reduce the risk to acceptable levels by determining the proper dose and precisely attenuating the vaccine virus such that replication is only high enough to stimulate protective immunity. Our data give a hint about what those minimum levels might be. In some animals, doses as low as 10 FFU of F-MuLV induced protection (Fig. 3). It is possible that a booster administration of the same dose might significantly improve protection while restricting replication levels. In the current experiments, only live vaccine virus induced protection. However, it remains possible that virus replication and spread were not requirements for protection and that there were only requirements for infection and protein synthesis. Future experiments with live replication-defective viruses may clarify this issue, but previous experiments have indicated that without replication, protection is limited by the MHC haplotype of the animal (34). Since we have now established immune cells as the effectors of protection, it will be possible in future studies to dissect which types of immune cells are necessary. Such experiments may reveal whether it is feasible to focus on a single lymphocyte subset alone to provide protection from retroviral infection.

5 6558 DITTMER ET AL. J. VIROL. ACKNOWLEDGMENT U.D. is supported by a fellowship from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft. REFERENCES 1. Almond, N., K. Kent, M. Cranage, E. Rud, B. Clarke, and E. J. Stott Protection by attenuated simian immunodeficiency virus in macaques against challenge with virus-infected cells. Lancet 345: Ben-David, Y., and A. Bernstein Friend virus-induced erythroleukemia and the multistage nature of cancer. Cell 66: Bontrop, R. E., N. Otting, H. Niphius, R. Noort, V. Teeuwsen, and J. L. Heeney The role of major histocompatibility complex polymorphisms on SIV infection in rhesus macaques. Immunol. Lett. 51: Britt, W. J., and B. Chesebro Use of monoclonal anti-gp70 antibodies to mimic the effects of the Rfv-3 gene in mice with Friend virus-induced leukemia. J. Immunol. 130: Chesebro, B., M. Bloom, K. Wehrly, and J. Nishio Persistence of infectious Friend virus in spleens of mice after spontaneous recovery from virus-induced erythroleukemia. J. Virol. 32: Chesebro, B., W. Britt, L. Evans, K. Wehrly, J. Nishio, and M. Cloyd Characterization of monoclonal antibodies reactive with murine leukemia viruses: use in analysis of strains of Friend MCF and Friend ecotropic murine leukemia virus. Virology 127: Chesebro, B., M. Miyazawa, and W. J. Britt Host genetic control of spontaneous and induced immunity to Friend murine retrovirus infection. Annu. Rev. Immunol. 8: Chesebro, B., and K. Wehrly Identification of a non-h-2 gene (Rfv-3) influencing recovery from viremia and leukemia induced by Friend virus complex. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 76: Chesebro, B., and K. Wehrly Studies on the role of the host immune response in recovery from Friend virus leukemia. II. Cell-mediated immunity. J. Exp. Med. 143: Chesebro, B., K. Wehrly, and J. Stimpfling Host genetic control of recovery from Friend leukemia virus-induced splenomegaly. Mapping of a gene within the major histocompatibility complex. J. Exp. Med. 140: Corbin, A., and M. Sitbon Protection against retroviral diseases after vaccination is conferred by interference to superinfection with attenuated murine leukemia viruses. J. Virol. 67: Czub, M., F. J. McAtee, S. Czub, W. P. Lynch, and J. L. Portis Prevention of retrovirus-induced neurological disease by infection with a nonneuropathogenic retrovirus. Virology 206: Daniel, M. D., F. Kirchhoff, S. C. Czajak, P. K. Sehgal, and R. C. Desrosiers Protective effects of a live attenuated SIV vaccine with a deletion in the nef gene. Science 258: Daniel, M. D., G. P. Mazzara, M. A. Simon, P. K. Sehgal, T. Kodama, D. L. Panicali, and R. C. Desrosiers High-titer immune responses elicited by recombinant vaccinia virus priming and particle boosting are ineffective in preventing virulent SIV infection. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses 10: Earl, P. L., B. Moss, R. P. Morrison, K. Wehrly, J. Nishio, and B. Chesebro T-lymphocyte priming and protection against Friend leukemia by vaccinia-retrovirus env gene recombinant. 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Chesebro Induction of protective immunity to Friend murine leukemia virus in genetic nonresponders to virus envelope protein. J. Immunol. 146: Kabat, D Molecular biology of Friend viral erythroleukemia. Curr. Top. Microbiol. Immunol. 148: Lander, M. R., and S. K. Chattopadhyay A Mus dunni cell line that lacks sequences closely related to endogenous murine leukemia viruses and can be infected by ecotropic, amphotropic, xenotropic, and mink cell focusforming viruses. J. Virol. 52: Li, J.-P., A. D. D Andrea, H. F. Lodish, and D. Baltimore Activation of cell growth by binding of Friend spleen focus-forming virus gp55 glycoprotein to the erythropoietin receptor. Nature (London) 343: Lilly, F Susceptibility to two strains of Friend leukemia virus in mice. Science 155: Limjoco, T. I., P. Dickie, H. Ikeda, and J. Silver Transgenic Fv-4 mice resistant to Friend virus. J. Virol. 67: Miyazawa, M., R. Fujisawa, C. Ishihara, Y. A. Takei, T. Shimizu, H. Uenishi, H. Yamagishi, and K. Kuribayashi Immunization with a single T helper cell epitope abrogates Friend virus-induced early erythroid proliferation and prevents late leukemia development. J. Immunol. 155: Moreau-Gachelin, F., A. Tavitian, and P. Tambourin Spi-1 is a putative oncogene in virally induced murine erythroleukemia. Nature (London) 331: Morrison, R. P., P. L. Earl, J. Nishio, D. L. Lodmell, B. Moss, and B. Chesebro Different H-2 subregions influence immunization against retrovirus and immunosuppression. Nature (London) 329: Munroe, D. G., J. W. Peacock, and S. Benchimol Inactivation of the cellular p53 gene is a common feature of Friend virus-induced erythroleukemia: relationship of inactivation to dominant transforming alleles. Mol. Cell. Biol. 10: Polsky, D., and F. Lilly Suppression of H-2b-associated resistance to Friend erythroleukemia virus by a class I gene from the H-2d major histocompatibility complex haplotype. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 88: Pryciak, P. M., and H. E. Varmus Fv-1 restriction and its effects on murine leukemia virus integration in vivo and in vitro. J. Virol. 66: Robertson, M. N., M. Miyazawa, S. Mori, B. Caughey, L. H. Evans, S. F. Hayes, and B. Chesebro Production of monoclonal antibodies reactive with a denatured form of the Friend murine leukemia virus gp70 envelope protein: use in a focal infectivity assay, immunohistochemical studies, electron microscopy and western blotting. J. Virol. Methods 34: Ruan, K.-S., and F. Lilly Approach to a retrovirus vaccine: immunization of mice against Friend virus disease with a replication-defective Friend murine leukemia virus. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 89: Sitbon, M., J. Nishio, K. Wehrly, D. Lodmell, and B. Chesebro Use of a focal immunofluorescence assay on live cells for quantitation of retroviruses: distinction of host range classes in virus mixtures and biological cloning of dual-tropic murine leukemia viruses. Virology 141: Stahl-Hennig, C., U. Dittmer, T. Nisslein, K. Pekrun, H. Petry, E. Jurkiewicz, D. Fuchs, H. Wachter, E. W. Rud, and G. Hunsmann Attenuated SIV imparts immunity to challenge with pathogenic spleen-derived SIV but cannot prevent repair of the nef deletion. Immunol. Lett. 51: Titti, F., L. Sernicola, A. Geraci, G. Panzini, S. Di Fabio, R. Belli, F. Monardo, A. Borsetti, M. T. Maggiorella, M. Koango-Mogtomo, F. Corrias, R. Zamarchi, A. Amadori, L. Chieco-Bianch, and P. Verani Live attenuated simian immunodeficiency virus prevents super-infection by cloned SIVmac251 in cynomolgus monkeys. J. Gen. Virol. 78: Wendling, F., and P. E. Tambourin Oncogenicity of Friend-virusinfected cells: determination of origin of spleen colonies by the H-2 antigens as genetic markers. Int. J. Cancer 22:

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