The purpose of this study was to examine the lung pathogenesis of murine gammaherpesvirus (MHV-68) infection in mice that lack CC chemokine receptor CCR2, an important receptor for macrophage recruitment to sites of inflammation. BALB/c and CCR2(-/-) mice were inoculated intranasally (i.n.) with MHV-68 and samples were collected during acute infection (6 dpi) and following viral clearance (12 dpi). Immunohistochemistry was used to determine which cells types responded to MHV-68 infection in the lungs. Lung pathology in infected BALB/c mice was characterized by a mixed inflammatory cell infiltrate, necrosis, and increased alveolar macrophages by 12 dpi. Immunohistochemistry showed intense positive staining for macrophages. CCR2(-/-) mice showed greater inflammation in the lungs at 12 dpi than did BALB/c mice, with more necrosis and diffuse neutrophil infiltrates in the alveoli. Immunohistochemistry demonstrated much less macrophage infiltration in the CCR2(-/-) mice than in the BALB/c mice. These studies show that CCR2 is involved in macrophage recruitment in response to MHV-68 infection and illustrates how impairments in macrophage function affect the normal inflammatory response to this viral infection.