Neurological complications of Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) have been reported almost exclusively in the course of acute primary infections. The role of EBV in paediatric neurological disease was investigated prospectively over a 2-year period, searching for acute primary, chronic, and reactivated EBV infections. Active EBV infections were diagnosed in 10/48 patients, including two with acute primary EBV infections (cranial neuritis and cerebellitis), one with chronic active infection (T/NK cell lymphoma with cranial neuritis), and seven with reactivated infections. Among these seven patients, three showed "Alice in Wonderland" syndrome, one facial nerve palsy, one progressive macrocephaly, and two prolonged encephalitic illness. The prognosis was good except for the patient with lethal T/NK cell lymphoma and the two girls with encephalitic illness. Despite steroid treatment, these girls suffered prolonged cognitive impairment and epileptic seizures. Both developed left-sided hippocampal atrophy, and one of them hippocampal sclerosis. Like primary infections, reactivated EBV infections cause neurological complications in a considerable number of paediatric patients, lead to serious long-term complications, and may contribute to the pathogenesis of hippocampal lesions.
The beta2 integrin LFA-1 (lymphocyte function associated antigen; CD11a/CD18) is the common ligand for the intercellular adhesion molecules (ICAMs). Integrins support cell function by providing co-stimulatory second signals that are a precondition for full cell activation first described for ICAM-1-binding to LFA-1 in lymphocytes. Integrins can also serve to activate functions associated with distinct subunits of other integrins. In addition to LFA-1, neutrophils express the beta2 integrin Mac-1 (CD11b/CD18; CR3) that apparently contains multiple sites that bind invading microbes directly or through surface-fixed C3, resulting in activation of the phagocyte function. Expression of the LFA-1 counter-receptor ICAM-1 on endothelial cells occurs only at the site of inflammation. Therefore, in neutrophils, ICAM-1 ligand binding could, as with lymphocytes, also play a part as a co-stimulatory signal to induce full phagocytotic function. We show that in neutrophils, the LFA-1 ligand interaction is the stimulatory signal to express full phagocytotic activation. This is best demonstrated by the rapid association of Streptococcus pyogenes with neutrophils, followed by ingestion, strong oxidative-burst induction and enhanced killing of these bacteria, which are well-known for their resistance to human neutrophil defense. These findings may contribute to the development of therapeutic strategies targeting the modulation of ICAM-1-leukocyte interaction.
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