Ryman Kate D, Gardner Christina L, Meier Kathryn C, Biron Christine A, Johnston Robert E, Klimstra William B
Department of Microbiology and Immunology and Center for Molecular and Tumor Virology, Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center, Shreveport, LA 71130-3932, USA.
Department of Molecular Microbiology, Brown University, Providence, RI 02912, USA.
J Gen Virol. 2007 Feb;88(Pt 2):518-529. doi: 10.1099/vir.0.82359-0.
Severity of alphavirus infection in humans tends to be strongly age-dependent and several studies using laboratory-adapted Sindbis virus (SB) AR339 strains have indicated that SB-induced disease in mice is similarly contingent upon host developmental status. In the current studies, the consensus wild-type SB, TR339, and in vivo imaging technology have been utilized to examine virus replication and disease manifestations in mice infected subcutaneously at 5 days of age (5D) vs 11D. Initial virulence studies with TR339 indicated that this age range is coincident with rapid transition from fatal to non-fatal outcome. Fatal infection of 5D mice is characterized by high-titre serum viraemia, extensive virus replication in skin, fibroblast connective tissue, muscle and brain, and hyperinflammatory cytokine induction. In contrast, 11D-infected mice experience more limited virus replication and tissue damage and develop mild, immune-mediated pathologies including encephalitis. These results further establish the linkage between hyperinflammatory cytokine induction and fatal outcome of infection. In vivo imaging using luciferase-expressing viruses and non-propagative replicons revealed that host development results in a restriction of virus replication within individual infected cells that is manifested as a delay in reduction of virus replication in the younger mice. Thus, an important contributing factor in age-dependent resistance to alphavirus infection is restriction of replication within first infected cells in peripheral tissues, which may augment other developmentally regulated attenuating effects, such as increasing neuronal resistance to virus infection and apoptotic death.
人感染甲病毒的严重程度往往强烈依赖于年龄,多项使用实验室适应的辛德毕斯病毒(SB)AR339毒株的研究表明,SB在小鼠中引发的疾病同样取决于宿主的发育状态。在当前研究中,利用了共识野生型SB、TR339以及体内成像技术,来检查5日龄(5D)与11日龄皮下感染小鼠的病毒复制和疾病表现。对TR339的初步毒力研究表明,这个年龄范围与从致命结果到非致命结果的快速转变相吻合。5日龄小鼠的致命感染特征为高滴度血清病毒血症、皮肤、成纤维细胞结缔组织、肌肉和脑中广泛的病毒复制以及促炎细胞因子的诱导。相比之下,11日龄感染的小鼠病毒复制和组织损伤更有限,并发展出包括脑炎在内的轻度免疫介导病理。这些结果进一步确立了促炎细胞因子诱导与感染致命结果之间的联系。使用表达荧光素酶的病毒和非增殖性复制子进行的体内成像显示,宿主发育导致单个感染细胞内病毒复制受到限制,这表现为幼龄小鼠病毒复制减少的延迟。因此,年龄依赖性抵抗甲病毒感染的一个重要促成因素是外周组织中首个感染细胞内复制的限制,这可能增强其他发育调节的衰减效应,例如增加神经元对病毒感染和凋亡死亡的抵抗力。