Setoh Yin Xiang, Prow Natalie A, Rawle Daniel J, Tan Cindy Si En, Edmonds Judith H, Hall Roy A, Khromykh Alexander A
Australian Infectious Diseases Research Centre, School of Chemistry and Molecular Biosciences, University of Queensland, St Lucia, QLD, Australia.
J Gen Virol. 2015 Jun;96(Pt 6):1297-1308. doi: 10.1099/vir.0.000069. Epub 2015 Jan 27.
A variant Australian West Nile virus (WNV) strain, WNVNSW2011, emerged in 2011 causing an unprecedented outbreak of encephalitis in horses in south-eastern Australia. However, no human cases associated with this strain have yet been reported. Studies using mouse models for WNV pathogenesis showed that WNVNSW2011 was less virulent than the human-pathogenic American strain of WNV, New York 99 (WNVNY99). To identify viral genes and mutations responsible for the difference in virulence between WNVNSW2011 and WNVNY99 strains, we constructed chimeric viruses with substitution of large genomic regions coding for the structural genes, non-structural genes and untranslated regions, as well as seven individual non-structural gene chimeras, using a modified circular polymerase extension cloning method. Our results showed that the complete non-structural region of WNVNSW2011, when substituted with that of WNVNY99, significantly enhanced viral replication and the ability to suppress type I IFN response in cells, resulting in higher virulence in mice. Analysis of the individual non-structural gene chimeras showed a predominant contribution of WNVNY99 NS3 to increased virus replication and evasion of IFN response in cells, and to virulence in mice. Other WNVNY99 non-structural proteins (NS2A, NS4B and NS5) were shown to contribute to the modulation of IFN response. Thus a combination of non-structural proteins, likely NS2A, NS3, NS4B and NS5, is primarily responsible for the difference in virulence between WNVNSW2011 and WNVNY99 strains, and accumulative mutations within these proteins would likely be required for the Australian WNVNSW2011 strain to become significantly more virulent.
一种变异的澳大利亚西尼罗河病毒(WNV)毒株,WNVNSW2011,于2011年出现,在澳大利亚东南部引发了前所未有的马匹脑炎疫情。然而,尚未报告与该毒株相关的人类病例。利用小鼠模型进行的西尼罗河病毒致病机制研究表明,WNVNSW2011的毒性低于具有人类致病性的美国西尼罗河病毒毒株纽约99(WNVNY99)。为了确定导致WNVNSW2011和WNVNY99毒株毒力差异的病毒基因和突变,我们使用改良的环状聚合酶延伸克隆方法构建了嵌合病毒,这些嵌合病毒替换了编码结构基因、非结构基因和非翻译区的大片基因组区域,以及七个单独的非结构基因嵌合体。我们的结果表明,当WNVNSW2011的完整非结构区域被WNVNY99的相应区域替换时,病毒复制显著增强,并且在细胞中抑制I型干扰素反应的能力增强,导致小鼠体内的毒力更高。对单个非结构基因嵌合体的分析表明,WNVNY99的NS3对细胞中病毒复制增加和干扰素反应逃避以及小鼠毒力增加起主要作用。其他WNVNY99非结构蛋白(NS2A、NS4B和NS5)也被证明有助于调节干扰素反应。因此,非结构蛋白的组合,可能是NS2A、NS3、NS4B和NS5,主要导致了WNVNSW2011和WNVNY99毒株之间的毒力差异,并且澳大利亚WNVNSW2011毒株可能需要这些蛋白内的累积突变才能变得更具毒性。