Cytomegalovirus infects human lymphocytes and monocytes: virus expression is restricted to immediate-early gene products.

Abstract
In this investigation, the ability of human cytomegalovirus to infect peripheral blood mononuclear cells was studied. With monoclonal antibody technology, it was demonstrated that cytomegalovirus could infect human lymphocytes of T- and B-cell lineage, natural killer cells and monocytes. Virus expression was limited to the synthesis of immediate-early cytomegalovirus polypeptides. These peripheral blood mononuclear cells did not produce infectious virus, nor were mature virions visualized by EM. This abortive infection of mononuclear cells was most convincingly shown with stocks of cytomegalovirus that had been recently isolated from infected patients and passaged minimally in fibroblasts. This argues for an increased lymphotropic effect of some isolates of cytomegalovirus, compared to strains of virus that are extensively adapted to growth in fibroblasts. Immunocompetent cells that were shown to be abortively infected with cytomegalovirus lost selected differentiated functions.