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Tissue-specific deletion
of the coxsackievirus and adenovirus receptor protects
mice from virus-induced pancreatitis and myocarditis
Kallewaard NL, Zhang L, Chen JW, Guttenberg M, Sanchez MD,
Bergelson JM. (2009) Cell Host Microbe. 2009 6:91-8
In cultured cells, infection by group B coxsackievirus (CVB)
is mediated by the coxsackievirus and adenovirus receptor
(CAR), but the importance of this molecule in CVB-induced
disease has not been determined. We generated mice with tissue-specific
ablation of CAR within each of two major CVB target organs,
the pancreas and heart. In the pancreas, deletion of CAR
resulted in a significant reduction in both virus titers
and virus-induced tissue damage. Similarly, cardiomyocyte-specific
CAR deletion resulted in a marked reduction in virus titer,
infection-associated cytokine production, and histopathology
within the heart. Consistent with the in vivo phenotype,
CAR-deficient cardiomyocytes resisted infection in vitro.
These results demonstrate a critical function for CAR in
the pathogenesis of CVB infection in vivo and in virus tropism
for the heart and pancreas.
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