1 before and during infection resulted in decreased morbidity and mortality compared to control influenza-infected mice. Not only did a portion of treated animals survive, those surviving animals also experienced rapid recovery to a normal weight range. These findings implicate NK cells in contributing to or exacerbating pathology arising from influenza infection. This contrasts with the described essential function of NK cells in protecting mice from influenza infection, selleck kinase inhibitor as evidenced by increased morbidity and mortality when NK cells are depleted or rendered less responsive [24-26]. Previous studies have generally used low doses of influenza virus to study NK cell functions and in this case NK
cells may contribute significantly to limiting the early propagation of virus. In comparing our experiments with those in previous reports, it appears that virus dose plays a role in determining the overall influence of NK cells in host morbidity and mortality as a consequence of influenza infection. Here, we clarify this issue by showing that increasing the influenza dose from medium to high switches the contribution of NK cells from reducing to enhancing morbidity and mortality. Our results with high-dose influenza infection confirm recent findings by Abdul-Careem et al. [36], where they observe NK cells contributing to pathology during influenza infection. Unlike our study, Abdul-Careem et
al. did neither examine virus dose vis-à-vis the NK-cell contribution to pathology during Ceritinib mouse influenza infection, nor define the importance of this factor, however, the single dose of virus they used may be similar to the high-dose virus level we used in this study, since they obtained similar outcomes [36]. Interestingly, for LCMV Teicoplanin infection in mice, it has been demonstrated that the dose of virus greatly affects the influence of NK cells in the immune response to the virus and host outcome. A low dose of LCMV results in viral clearance; a medium dose results in a deleterious
NK-cell dependent alteration of T-cell responses, immunopathology, and virus persistence; while with a high dose of virus, NK cells are beneficial by suppressing T cells that would otherwise mediate severe pathology and mortality [13]. It is conceivable that at high influenza dose, the outcome we observed is similar to that seen with infection of mice with a medium dose of LCMV, where there is NK-cell dependent pathology. The age of mice is another factor affecting host pathology and mortality in the context of influenza infection. This can be seen in comparing the survival curves of the unmanipulated influenza infected control groups in Figures 3 and 5. None of the influenza infected control mice in Figure 3 survived, while approximately 30% of the mice used in Figure 5 did survive the same dose of influenza infection. The mice used in Figures 3 were 4 months old, while those used in Figure 5 were 2 months old.