Boylan Brendan T, Moreira Fernando R, Carlson Tim W, Bernard Kristen A
Department of Pathobiological Sciences, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, United States of America.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2017 Feb 10;11(2):e0005394. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0005394. eCollection 2017 Feb.
Half of the human population is at risk of infection by an arthropod-borne virus. Many of these arboviruses, such as West Nile, dengue, and Zika viruses, infect humans by way of a bite from an infected mosquito. This infectious inoculum is insect cell-derived giving the virus particles distinct qualities not present in secondary infectious virus particles produced by infected vertebrate host cells. The insect cell-derived particles differ in the glycosylation of virus structural proteins and the lipid content of the envelope, as well as their induction of cytokines. Thus, in order to accurately mimic the inoculum delivered by arthropods, arboviruses should be derived from arthropod cells. Previous studies have packaged replicon genome in mammalian cells to produce replicon particles, which undergo only one round of infection, but no studies exist packaging replicon particles in mosquito cells. Here we optimized the packaging of West Nile virus replicon genome in mosquito cells and produced replicon particles at high concentration, allowing us to mimic mosquito cell-derived viral inoculum. These particles were mature with similar genome equivalents-to-infectious units as full-length West Nile virus. We then compared the mosquito cell-derived particles to mammalian cell-derived particles in mice. Both replicon particles infected skin at the inoculation site and the draining lymph node by 3 hours post-inoculation. The mammalian cell-derived replicon particles spread from the site of inoculation to the spleen and contralateral lymph nodes significantly more than the particles derived from mosquito cells. This in vivo difference in spread of West Nile replicons in the inoculum demonstrates the importance of using arthropod cell-derived particles to model early events in arboviral infection and highlights the value of these novel arthropod cell-derived replicon particles for studying the earliest virus-host interactions for arboviruses.
全球一半人口面临节肢动物传播病毒感染的风险。许多这类虫媒病毒,如西尼罗河病毒、登革热病毒和寨卡病毒,通过受感染蚊子的叮咬感染人类。这种感染性接种物源自昆虫细胞,赋予病毒颗粒一些独特特性,而这些特性在受感染脊椎动物宿主细胞产生的继发性感染性病毒颗粒中并不存在。源自昆虫细胞的颗粒在病毒结构蛋白的糖基化、包膜的脂质含量以及细胞因子的诱导方面存在差异。因此,为了准确模拟节肢动物传递的接种物,虫媒病毒应源自节肢动物细胞。先前的研究已在哺乳动物细胞中包装复制子基因组以产生复制子颗粒,这些颗粒仅经历一轮感染,但尚无在蚊子细胞中包装复制子颗粒的研究。在此,我们优化了西尼罗河病毒复制子基因组在蚊子细胞中的包装,并高浓度生产了复制子颗粒,从而能够模拟源自蚊子细胞的病毒接种物。这些颗粒成熟后具有与全长西尼罗河病毒相似的基因组当量与感染单位。然后,我们在小鼠体内比较了源自蚊子细胞的颗粒和源自哺乳动物细胞的颗粒。两种复制子颗粒在接种后3小时均感染了接种部位的皮肤和引流淋巴结。源自哺乳动物细胞的复制子颗粒从接种部位扩散到脾脏和对侧淋巴结的程度明显高于源自蚊子细胞的颗粒。西尼罗河复制子在接种物中体内传播的这种差异表明,使用源自节肢动物细胞的颗粒来模拟虫媒病毒感染早期事件非常重要,并突出了这些新型源自节肢动物细胞的复制子颗粒在研究虫媒病毒最早的病毒-宿主相互作用方面的价值。