IMR Press / FBL / Volume 12 / Issue 5 / DOI: 10.2741/2172

Frontiers in Bioscience-Landmark (FBL) is published by IMR Press from Volume 26 Issue 5 (2021). Previous articles were published by another publisher on a subscription basis, and they are hosted by IMR Press on imrpress.com as a courtesy and upon agreement with Frontiers in Bioscience.

Article
Immune response to MMTV infection
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1 Department of Biochemistry, University of Lausanne, Ch. des Boveresses 155, CH-1066 Epalinges, Switzerland
2 Division of Developmental Immunology, Center for Biomedicine, Department of Clinical and Biological Sciences (DKBW), University of Basel, CH-4058 Basel, Switzerland
Front. Biosci. (Landmark Ed) 2007, 12(5), 1594–1609; https://doi.org/10.2741/2172
Published: 1 January 2007
Abstract

Mouse mammary tumor virus (MMTV) has developed a strategy of exploitation of the immune response. It infects dendritic cells and B cells and requires this infection to establish an efficient chronic infection. This allows transmission of infection to the mammary gland, production in milk and infection of the next generation via lactation. The elaborate strategy developed by MMTV utilizes several key elements of the normal immune response. Starting with the infection and activation of dendritic cells and B cells leading to the expression of a viral superantigen followed by professional superantigen-mediated priming of naive polyclonal T cells by dendritic cells and induction of superantigen-mediated T cell B cell collaboration results in long-lasting germinal center formation and production of long-lived B cells that can later carry the virus to the mammary gland epithelium. Later in life it can induce transformation of mammary gland epithelium by integrating close to proto-oncogenes leading to their overexpression. Genes encoding proteins of the Wnt-pathway are preferential targets. This review will put these effects in the context of a normal immune response and summarize important facts on MMTV biology.

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