Manickam Cordelia, Wachtman Lynn, Martinot Amanda J, Giavedoni Luis D, Reeves R Keith
Center for Virology and Vaccine Research, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts, United States of America.
New England Primate Research Center, Harvard Medical School, Southborough Campus, Southborough, Massachusetts, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2017 Jan 13;12(1):e0170240. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0170240. eCollection 2017.
Chronic hepatitis C has been associated with metabolic syndrome that includes insulin resistance, hepatic steatosis and obesity. These metabolic aberrations are risk factors for disease severity and treatment outcome in infected patients. Experimental infection of marmosets with GBV-B serves as a tangible, small animal model for human HCV infection, and while virology and pathology are well described, a full investigation of clinical disease and the metabolic milieu is lacking. In this study six marmosets were infected intravenously with GBV-B and changes in hematologic, serum biochemical and plasma metabolic measures were investigated over the duration of infection. Infected animals exhibited signs of lymphocytopenia, but platelet and RBC counts were generally stable or even increased. Although most animals showed a transient decline in blood glucose, infection resulted in several fold increases in plasma insulin, glucagon and glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1). All infected animals experienced transient weight loss within the first 28 days of infection, but also became hypertriglyceridemic and had up to 10-fold increases in adipocytokines such as resistin and plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 (PAI-1). In liver, moderate to severe cytoplasmic changes associated with steatotic changes was observed microscopically at 168 days post infection. Collectively, these results suggest that GBV-B infection is accompanied by hematologic, biochemical and metabolic abnormalities that could lead to obesity, diabetes, thrombosis and atherosclerosis, even after virus has been cleared. Our findings mirror those found in HCV patients, suggesting that metabolic syndrome could be conserved among hepaciviruses, and both mechanistic and interventional studies for treating HCV-induced metabolic complications could be evaluated in this animal model.
慢性丙型肝炎与代谢综合征相关,代谢综合征包括胰岛素抵抗、肝脂肪变性和肥胖。这些代谢异常是感染患者疾病严重程度和治疗结果的危险因素。用GBV - B对狨猴进行实验性感染可作为人类丙型肝炎病毒感染切实可行的小动物模型,虽然病毒学和病理学已有充分描述,但缺乏对临床疾病和代谢环境的全面研究。在本研究中,6只狨猴经静脉感染GBV - B,并在感染期间对血液学、血清生化和血浆代谢指标的变化进行了研究。受感染动物出现淋巴细胞减少的迹象,但血小板和红细胞计数总体稳定甚至增加。虽然大多数动物血糖出现短暂下降,但感染导致血浆胰岛素、胰高血糖素和胰高血糖素样肽1(GLP - 1)增加数倍。所有受感染动物在感染的前28天内体重短暂减轻,但也出现高甘油三酯血症,抵抗素和纤溶酶原激活物抑制剂1(PAI - 1)等脂肪细胞因子增加高达10倍。在肝脏中,感染后168天显微镜下观察到与脂肪变性相关的中度至重度细胞质变化。总体而言,这些结果表明,即使病毒已被清除,GBV - B感染仍伴有血液学、生化和代谢异常,可能导致肥胖、糖尿病、血栓形成和动脉粥样硬化。我们的研究结果与丙型肝炎病毒患者的结果相似,表明代谢综合征在肝炎病毒中可能是保守的,并且可以在这个动物模型中评估治疗丙型肝炎病毒引起的代谢并发症的机制和干预研究。