A highly neuropathogenic retrovirus, NT40, was generated by serially passaging an infectious molecular clone of Friend murine leukemia virus, FB29, through F344 Fisher rats. NT40 induced severe neurological signs such as reflex abnormalities and ataxia within 4-6 weeks following neonatal inoculation. FB29 led to only very mild neurological dysfunctions with longer incubation periods. Pathological alterations were characterized by mild (FB29) to extensive (NT40) noninflammatory spongiform degeneration, mainly of brain-stem areas. Infectious center assays revealed that viral titers in brain tissues of NT40-infected rats were 100-fold higher than those of FB29-infected animals. Employing immunohistochemistry, in situ hybridization, and flow cytometry, NT40 was found to infect many endothelial cells of brain blood vessels and microglia, whereas FB29 infected only microglia and those to a lower extent. However, when isolated from adult diseased rats, microglial cells turned out in both cases to be nonproductively infected with either FB29 or NT40. Of peripheral organs, we found enhanced levels of NT40 in peritoneal macrophages but not in spleen, thymus, or serum when compared to FB29. Altogether these data suggest that an expanded cellular tropism within the CNS and elevated viral titers in macrophages and microglia correlated with enhancement of neuropathogenicity.
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