Sullivan Con, Jurcyzszak Denise, Goody Michelle F, Gabor Kristin A, Longfellow Jacob R, Millard Paul J, Kim Carol H
Department of Molecular and Biomedical Sciences, University of Maine; Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences and Engineering, University of Maine.
Department of Molecular and Biomedical Sciences, University of Maine.
J Vis Exp. 2017 Jan 20(119):55235. doi: 10.3791/55235.
Each year, seasonal influenza outbreaks profoundly affect societies worldwide. In spite of global efforts, influenza remains an intractable healthcare burden. The principle strategy to curtail infections is yearly vaccination. In individuals who have contracted influenza, antiviral drugs can mitigate symptoms. There is a clear and unmet need to develop alternative strategies to combat influenza. Several animal models have been created to model host-influenza interactions. Here, protocols for generating zebrafish models for systemic and localized human influenza A virus (IAV) infection are described. Using a systemic IAV infection model, small molecules with potential antiviral activity can be screened. As a proof-of-principle, a protocol that demonstrates the efficacy of the antiviral drug Zanamivir in IAV-infected zebrafish is described. It shows how disease phenotypes can be quantified to score the relative efficacy of potential antivirals in IAV-infected zebrafish. In recent years, there has been increased appreciation for the critical role neutrophils play in the human host response to influenza infection. The zebrafish has proven to be an indispensable model for the study of neutrophil biology, with direct impacts on human medicine. A protocol to generate a localized IAV infection in the Tg(mpx:mCherry) zebrafish line to study neutrophil biology in the context of a localized viral infection is described. Neutrophil recruitment to localized infection sites provides an additional quantifiable phenotype for assessing experimental manipulations that may have therapeutic applications. Both zebrafish protocols described faithfully recapitulate aspects of human IAV infection. The zebrafish model possesses numerous inherent advantages, including high fecundity, optical clarity, amenability to drug screening, and availability of transgenic lines, including those in which immune cells such as neutrophils are labeled with fluorescent proteins. The protocols detailed here exploit these advantages and have the potential to reveal critical insights into host-IAV interactions that may ultimately translate into the clinic.
每年,季节性流感疫情都会对全球社会造成深远影响。尽管全球都在努力,但流感仍然是一个难以解决的医疗负担。减少感染的主要策略是每年接种疫苗。对于已感染流感的个体,抗病毒药物可以减轻症状。显然,开发对抗流感的替代策略的需求尚未得到满足。已经创建了几种动物模型来模拟宿主与流感的相互作用。在此,描述了用于全身和局部人类甲型流感病毒(IAV)感染的斑马鱼模型的生成方案。使用全身IAV感染模型,可以筛选具有潜在抗病毒活性的小分子。作为原理验证,描述了一种证明抗病毒药物扎那米韦在IAV感染的斑马鱼中有效性的方案。它展示了如何对疾病表型进行量化,以评估潜在抗病毒药物在IAV感染的斑马鱼中的相对疗效。近年来,人们越来越认识到中性粒细胞在人类宿主对流感感染的反应中所起的关键作用。斑马鱼已被证明是研究中性粒细胞生物学不可或缺的模型,对人类医学有直接影响。描述了一种在Tg(mpx:mCherry)斑马鱼品系中产生局部IAV感染以在局部病毒感染的背景下研究中性粒细胞生物学的方案。中性粒细胞向局部感染部位的募集为评估可能具有治疗应用的实验操作提供了另一种可量化的表型。所描述的两种斑马鱼方案都忠实地概括了人类IAV感染的各个方面。斑马鱼模型具有许多固有优势,包括高繁殖力、光学透明度、适合药物筛选以及转基因品系的可用性,包括那些用荧光蛋白标记中性粒细胞等免疫细胞的品系。这里详细介绍的方案利用了这些优势,有可能揭示对宿主 - IAV相互作用的关键见解,这些见解最终可能转化为临床应用。