Li Lihong, Li Zhuoran, Wang Erlin, Yang Rui, Xiao Yu, Han Hongbo, Lang Fengchao, Li Xin, Xia Yujie, Gao Feng, Li Qihan, Fraser Nigel W, Zhou Jumin
Key Laboratory of Animal Models and Human Disease Mechanisms, Kunming Institute of Zoology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Kunming, Yunnan, China.
School of Life Sciences, Panzhihua College, Panzhihua, Sichuan, China.
J Virol. 2015 Oct 28;90(2):790-804. doi: 10.1128/JVI.02258-15. Print 2016 Jan 15.
Studies of herpes simplex virus (HSV) infections of humans are limited by the use of rodent models such as mice, rabbits, and guinea pigs. Tree shrews (Tupaia belangeri chinensis) are small mammals indigenous to southwest Asia. At behavioral, anatomical, genomic, and evolutionary levels, tree shrews are much closer to primates than rodents are, and tree shrews are susceptible to HSV infection. Thus, we have studied herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1) infection in the tree shrew trigeminal ganglion (TG) following ocular inoculation. In situ hybridization, PCR, and quantitative reverse transcription-PCR (qRT-PCR) analyses confirm that HSV-1 latently infects neurons of the TG. When explant cocultivation of trigeminal ganglia was performed, the virus was recovered after 5 days of cocultivation with high efficiency. Swabbing the corneas of latently infected tree shrews revealed that tree shrews shed virus spontaneously at low frequencies. However, tree shrews differ significantly from mice in the expression of key HSV-1 genes, including ICP0, ICP4, and latency-associated transcript (LAT). In acutely infected tree shrew TGs, no level of ICP4 was observed, suggesting the absence of infection or a very weak, acute infection compared to that of the mouse. Immunofluorescence staining with ICP4 monoclonal antibody, and immunohistochemistry detection by HSV-1 polyclonal antibodies, showed a lack of viral proteins in tree shrew TGs during both acute and latent phases of infection. Cultivation of supernatant from homogenized, acutely infected TGs with RS1 cells also exhibited an absence of infectious HSV-1 from tree shrew TGs. We conclude that the tree shrew has an undetectable, or a much weaker, acute infection in the TGs. Interestingly, compared to mice, tree shrew TGs express high levels of ICP0 transcript in addition to LAT during latency. However, the ICP0 transcript remained nuclear, and no ICP0 protein could be seen during the course of mouse and tree shrew TG infections. Taken together, these observations suggest that the tree shrew TG infection differs significantly from the existing rodent models.
Herpes simplex viruses (HSVs) establish lifelong infection in more than 80% of the human population, and their reactivation leads to oral and genital herpes. Currently, rodent models are the preferred models for latency studies. Rodents are distant from primates and may not fully represent human latency. The tree shrew is a small mammal, a prosimian primate, indigenous to southwest Asia. In an attempt to further develop the tree shrew as a useful model to study herpesvirus infection, we studied the establishment of latency and reactivation of HSV-1 in tree shrews following ocular inoculation. We found that the latent virus, which resides in the sensory neurons of the trigeminal ganglion, could be stress reactivated to produce infectious virus, following explant cocultivation and that spontaneous reactivation could be detected by cell culture of tears. Interestingly, the tree shrew model is quite different from the mouse model of HSV infection, in that the virus exhibited only a mild acute infection following inoculation with no detectable infectious virus from the sensory neurons. The mild infection may be more similar to human infection in that the sensory neurons continue to function after herpes reactivation and the affected skin tissue does not lose sensation. Our findings suggest that the tree shrew is a viable model to study HSV latency.
对人类单纯疱疹病毒(HSV)感染的研究受到诸如小鼠、兔子和豚鼠等啮齿动物模型的限制。树鼩(Tupaia belangeri chinensis)是原产于亚洲西南部的小型哺乳动物。在行为、解剖、基因组和进化水平上,树鼩比啮齿动物更接近灵长类动物,并且树鼩易受HSV感染。因此,我们研究了眼部接种后树鼩三叉神经节(TG)中的单纯疱疹病毒1(HSV-1)感染。原位杂交、PCR和定量逆转录PCR(qRT-PCR)分析证实HSV-1潜伏感染TG的神经元。进行三叉神经节的外植体共培养时,共培养5天后能高效回收病毒。擦拭潜伏感染树鼩的角膜发现,树鼩以低频率自发排出病毒。然而,树鼩在包括ICP0、ICP4和潜伏相关转录本(LAT)等关键HSV-1基因的表达上与小鼠有显著差异。在急性感染的树鼩TG中,未观察到ICP4水平,这表明与小鼠相比,不存在感染或存在非常微弱的急性感染。用ICP4单克隆抗体进行免疫荧光染色以及用HSV-1多克隆抗体进行免疫组织化学检测,结果显示在感染的急性和潜伏阶段,树鼩TG中均缺乏病毒蛋白。用RS1细胞培养急性感染TG匀浆的上清液,也显示树鼩TG中不存在感染性HSV-1。我们得出结论,树鼩在TG中存在无法检测到的或非常微弱的急性感染。有趣的是,与小鼠相比,树鼩TG在潜伏期间除了表达LAT外,还高水平表达ICP0转录本。然而,ICP0转录本仍位于细胞核中,在小鼠和树鼩TG感染过程中均未观察到ICP0蛋白。综上所述,这些观察结果表明树鼩TG感染与现有的啮齿动物模型有显著差异。
单纯疱疹病毒(HSV)在超过80%的人类中建立终身感染,其再激活会导致口腔和生殖器疱疹。目前,啮齿动物模型是潜伏期研究的首选模型。啮齿动物与灵长类动物亲缘关系较远,可能无法完全代表人类潜伏期。树鼩是原产于亚洲西南部的小型哺乳动物,属于原猴亚目灵长类动物。为了进一步将树鼩开发成研究疱疹病毒感染的有用模型,我们研究了眼部接种后树鼩中HSV-1潜伏期的建立和再激活。我们发现,潜伏在三叉神经节感觉神经元中的病毒,在外植体共培养后可因应激而再激活产生感染性病毒,并且通过泪液的细胞培养可检测到自发再激活。有趣的是,树鼩模型与HSV感染的小鼠模型有很大不同之处在于,接种后病毒仅表现出轻微的急性感染,感觉神经元中未检测到感染性病毒。这种轻微感染可能更类似于人类感染,因为疱疹再激活后感觉神经元仍能继续发挥功能,且受影响的皮肤组织不会失去感觉。我们的研究结果表明树鼩是研究HSV潜伏期的可行模型。