Shresta Sujan, Sharar Kristin L, Prigozhin Daniil M, Beatty P Robert, Harris Eva
Division of Vaccine Discovery, La Jolla Institute for Allergy and Immunology, 9420 Athena Circle, La Jolla, CA 92037, USA.
J Virol. 2006 Oct;80(20):10208-17. doi: 10.1128/JVI.00062-06.
Lack of an appropriate animal model for dengue virus (DEN), which causes dengue fever and dengue hemorrhagic fever/dengue shock syndrome (DHF/DSS), has impeded characterization of the mechanisms underlying the disease pathogenesis. The cardinal feature of DHF/DSS, the severe form of DEN infection, is increased vascular permeability. To develop a murine model that is more relevant to DHF/DSS, a novel DEN strain, D2S10, was generated by alternately passaging a non-mouse-adapted DEN strain between mosquito cells and mice, thereby mimicking the natural transmission cycle of the virus between mosquitoes and humans. After infection with D2S10, mice lacking interferon receptors died early without manifesting signs of paralysis, carried infectious virus in both non-neuronal and neuronal tissues, and exhibited signs of increased vascular permeability. In contrast, mice infected with the parental DEN strain developed paralysis at late times after infection, contained detectable levels of virus only in the central nervous system, and displayed normal vascular permeability. In the mice infected with D2S10, but not the parental DEN strain, significant levels of serum tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) were produced, and the neutralization of TNF-alpha activity prevented early death of D2S10-infected mice. Sequence analysis comparing D2S10 to its parental strain implicated a conserved region of amino acid residues in the envelope protein as a possible source for the D2S10 phenotype. These results demonstrate that D2S10 causes a more relevant disease in mice and that TNF-alpha may be one of several key mediators of severe DEN-induced disease in mice. This report represents a significant advance in animal models for severe DEN disease, and it begins to provide mechanistic insights into DEN-induced disease in vivo.
登革病毒(DEN)可导致登革热和登革出血热/登革休克综合征(DHF/DSS),但缺乏合适的动物模型阻碍了对该疾病发病机制的特征描述。DHF/DSS是DEN感染的严重形式,其主要特征是血管通透性增加。为了开发一种与DHF/DSS更相关的小鼠模型,通过在蚊细胞和小鼠之间交替传代一种非小鼠适应性DEN毒株,产生了一种新型DEN毒株D2S10,从而模拟了病毒在蚊子和人类之间的自然传播周期。用D2S10感染后,缺乏干扰素受体的小鼠早期死亡,未表现出麻痹迹象,在非神经组织和神经组织中都携带传染性病毒,并表现出血管通透性增加的迹象。相比之下,感染亲本DEN毒株的小鼠在感染后期出现麻痹,仅在中枢神经系统中含有可检测水平的病毒,并且血管通透性正常。在感染D2S10的小鼠中,而非感染亲本DEN毒株的小鼠中,产生了显著水平的血清肿瘤坏死因子α(TNF-α),并且TNF-α活性的中和可防止D2S10感染小鼠的早期死亡。将D2S10与其亲本毒株进行序列分析表明,包膜蛋白中一个保守的氨基酸残基区域可能是D2S10表型的来源。这些结果表明,D2S10在小鼠中引起了更相关的疾病,并且TNF-α可能是小鼠中严重DEN诱导疾病的几个关键介质之一。本报告代表了严重DEN疾病动物模型的重大进展,并开始为体内DEN诱导疾病提供机制性见解。