Burke Crystal W, Bridges Olga, Brown Sherri, Rahija Richard, Russell Charles J
Department of Infectious Diseases, St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, Memphis, Tennessee, United States of America.
PLoS Pathog. 2013;9(11):e1003786. doi: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1003786. Epub 2013 Nov 21.
Little is known about how the mode of respiratory virus transmission determines the dynamics of primary infection and protection from reinfection. Using non-invasive imaging of murine parainfluenza virus 1 (Sendai virus) in living mice, we determined the frequency, timing, dynamics, and virulence of primary infection after contact and airborne transmission, as well as the tropism and magnitude of reinfection after subsequent challenge. Contact transmission of Sendai virus was 100% efficient, phenotypically uniform, initiated and grew to robust levels in the upper respiratory tract (URT), later spread to the lungs, grew to a lower level in the lungs than the URT, and protected from reinfection completely in the URT yet only partially in the lungs. Airborne transmission through 7.6-cm and 15.2-cm separations between donor and recipient mice was 86%-100% efficient. The dynamics of primary infection after airborne transmission varied between individual mice and included the following categories: (a) non-productive transmission, (b) tracheal dominant, (c) tracheal initiated yet respiratory disseminated, and (d) nasopharyngeal initiated yet respiratory disseminated. Any previous exposure to Sendai virus infection protected from mortality and severe morbidity after lethal challenge. Furthermore, a higher level of primary infection in a given respiratory tissue (nasopharynx, trachea, or lungs) was inversely correlated with the level of reinfection in that same tissue. Overall, the mode of transmission determined the dynamics and tropism of primary infection, which in turn governed the level of seroconversion and protection from reinfection. These data are the first description of the dynamics of respiratory virus infection and protection from reinfection throughout the respiratory tracts of living animals after airborne transmission. This work provides a basis for understanding parainfluenza virus transmission and protective immunity and for developing novel vaccines and non-pharmaceutical interventions.
关于呼吸道病毒传播模式如何决定初次感染的动态过程以及预防再次感染的情况,我们所知甚少。通过对活体小鼠体内的鼠副流感病毒1型(仙台病毒)进行非侵入性成像,我们确定了接触传播和空气传播后初次感染的频率、时间、动态过程和毒力,以及后续攻击后再次感染的嗜性和程度。仙台病毒的接触传播效率为100%,表型一致,在上呼吸道(URT)开始并发展到强劲水平,随后扩散到肺部,在肺部的生长水平低于URT,并且在上呼吸道能完全预防再次感染,但在肺部只能部分预防。供体小鼠和受体小鼠之间通过7.6厘米和15.2厘米间隔的空气传播效率为86%-100%。空气传播后初次感染的动态过程在个体小鼠之间有所不同,包括以下几种类型:(a)非生产性传播,(b)气管主导型,(c)气管起始但呼吸道播散型,以及(d)鼻咽起始但呼吸道播散型。之前任何一次接触仙台病毒感染都能预防致死性攻击后的死亡和严重发病。此外,特定呼吸组织(鼻咽、气管或肺部)中较高水平的初次感染与同一组织中再次感染的水平呈负相关。总体而言,传播模式决定了初次感染的动态过程和嗜性,进而决定了血清转化水平和预防再次感染的能力。这些数据首次描述了空气传播后活体动物整个呼吸道中呼吸道病毒感染和预防再次感染的动态过程。这项工作为理解副流感病毒传播和保护性免疫以及开发新型疫苗和非药物干预措施提供了基础。