Protective role of interferon against cytotoxcicity induced by rabies virus in mice

AFRICAN JOURNAL OF BIOTECHNOLOGY(2010)

Cited 4|Views2
No score
Abstract
Rabies remains an important public health problem in the world due to uncontrolled enzootic rabies, lack of safe efficient vaccines and poor information on the risk of contracting rabies post animal exposure. The lethality and mutagenic potential of challenge virus standard (CVS) was evaluated in mice. Mice were intracerebrally infected (MIC) with low, medium and high viral LD50 (MICLD50). Mice were subjected to immunomodulation using interferon (IFN alpha-2a) pre-infection. The infected groups pretreated with IFN-alpha 2a showed a higher survival rate than the infected group. Statistically significant increase in structural and numerical chromosomal aberrations and a decreased mitotic activity of mice bone marrow cells was observed post infection. Pretreatment of the infected groups with IFN alpha-2a showed a marked and significant reduction of these cytogenetic changes. The increased survival rate and reduced cytogenetic changes suggest that protection induced by interferon against rabies virus activity could be, at least partially, attributable to blockage of the replication of CVS strain of rabies virus. It could be concluded that interferon can be used as an immune enhancer to the application of vaccine administration.
More
Translated text
Key words
Rabies,interferon,chromosomal aberration
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined