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A Mouse Model That Mimics AIDS-Related Cytomegalovirus Retinitis: Insights into Pathogenesis

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Last modified
  • 05/22/2025
Type of Material
Authors
    Jay J Oh, Georgia State UniversityJessica J Carter, Georgia State UniversityRichard Dix, Emory University
Language
  • English
Date
  • 2021-07-01
Publisher
  • MDPI AG
Publication Version
Copyright Statement
  • © 2021 by the authors.
License
Final Published Version (URL)
Title of Journal or Parent Work
Volume
  • 10
Issue
  • 7
Grant/Funding Information
  • This work was supported by NIH/NEI Grant RO1 EY024630 (RDD), NIH/NEI Core Grant P30 EY006360 (JCC), and Emory Eye Center Vision Training Grant NIH/NEI T32 EY007092 (JCC).
Abstract
  • With the appearance of the worldwide AIDS pandemic four decades ago came a number of debilitating opportunistic infections in patients immunosuppressed by the pathogenic human retrovirus HIV. Among these was a severe sight-threatening retinal disease caused by human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) that remains today a significant cause of vision loss and blindness in untreated AIDS patients without access or sufficient response to combination antiretroviral therapy. Early investigations of AIDS-related HCMV retinitis quickly characterized its hallmark clinical features and unique histopathologic presentation but did not begin to identify the precise virologic and immunologic events that allow the onset and development of this retinal disease during HIV-induced immunosuppression. Toward this end, several mouse models of experimental cytomegalovirus retinitis have been developed to provide new insights into the pathophysiology of HCMV retinitis during AIDS. Herein, we provide a summary and comparison of these mouse models of AIDS-related HCMV retinitis with particular emphasis on one mouse model developed in our laboratory in which mice with a murine acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (MAIDS) of murine retrovirus origin develops a reproducible and well characterized retinitis following intraocular infection with murine cytomegalovirus (MCMV). The MAIDS model of MCMV retinitis has advanced the discovery of many clinically relevant virologic and immunologic mechanisms of virus-induced retinal tissue destruction that are discussed and summarized in this review. These findings may extend to the pathogenesis of AIDS-related HCMV retinitis and other AIDS-related opportunistic virus infections.
Author Notes
Keywords
Research Categories
  • Health Sciences, Opthamology
  • Biology, General

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