Protective and Toxic Effects of a Nuclease-Resistant Derivative of Polyriboinosinic.Polyribocytidylic Acid on Venezuelan Equine Encephalomyelitis Virus in Rhesus Monkeys

Abstract
Polyriboinosinic-polyribocytidylic acid, stabilized with poly-l-lysine and carboxymethylcellulose (poly ICLC), favorably alters the pathogenesis of Venezuelan equine encephalomyelitis virus infection in rhesus monkeys by decreasing the number of infected monkeys that become detectably viremic and by delaying the onset of viremia in the remaining monkeys. Poly ICLC is known to induce high circulating levels of interferon in primates, and the interferon system is assumed to be the mechanism by which poly ICLC exerts its antiviral effect. Poly ICLC treatment was associated with a few deaths, but only under certain conditions of infection and handling. The death of some infected, treated monkeys in the absence of death in monkeys that were either infected and untreated or treated and uninfected suggests a synergistic toxicity resulting from the combination of infection, handling, and poly ICLC treatment, although other explanations are possible.