Division of Vector-Borne Diseases, Arboviral Disease Branch, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Fort Collins, Colorado, United States of America.
Center for Vectorborne Disease Research and Department of Pathology, Microbiology and Immunology, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of California, Davis, California, United States of America.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2018 Feb 15;12(2):e0006302. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0006302. eCollection 2018 Feb.
West Nile virus (WNV) and St. Louis encephalitis (SLEV) virus are enzootically maintained in North America in cycles involving the same mosquito vectors and similar avian hosts. However, these viruses exhibit dissimilar viremia and virulence phenotypes in birds: WNV is associated with high magnitude viremias that can result in mortality in certain species such as American crows (AMCRs, Corvus brachyrhynchos) whereas SLEV infection yields lower viremias that have not been associated with avian mortality. Cross-neutralization of these viruses in avian sera has been proposed to explain the reduced circulation of SLEV since the introduction of WNV in North America; however, in 2015, both viruses were the etiologic agents of concurrent human encephalitis outbreaks in Arizona, indicating the need to re-evaluate host factors and cross-neutralization responses as factors potentially affecting viral co-circulation. Reciprocal chimeric WNV and SLEV viruses were constructed by interchanging the pre-membrane (prM)-envelope (E) genes, and viruses subsequently generated were utilized herein for the inoculation of three different avian species: house sparrows (HOSPs; Passer domesticus), house finches (Haemorhous mexicanus) and AMCRs. Cross-protective immunity between parental and chimeric viruses were also assessed in HOSPs. Results indicated that the prM-E genes did not modulate avian replication or virulence differences between WNV and SLEV in any of the three avian species. However, WNV-prME proteins did dictate cross-protective immunity between these antigenically heterologous viruses. Our data provides further evidence of the important role that the WNV / SLEV viral non-structural genetic elements play in viral replication, avian host competence and virulence.
西尼罗河病毒(WNV)和圣路易斯脑炎病毒(SLEV)在北美的同一蚊媒和相似的禽宿主中进行地方性维持。然而,这些病毒在鸟类中表现出不同的病毒血症和毒力表型:WNV 与高幅度的病毒血症相关,这可能导致某些物种(如美洲乌鸦(AMCRs,Corvus brachyrhynchos))死亡,而 SLEV 感染导致较低的病毒血症,与鸟类死亡率无关。在鸟类血清中对这些病毒的交叉中和作用被认为是解释 SLEV 在北美引入 WNV 后循环减少的原因;然而,2015 年,这两种病毒都是亚利桑那州同时发生的人类脑炎暴发的病原体,这表明需要重新评估宿主因素和交叉中和反应作为可能影响病毒共同循环的因素。通过交换前膜(prM)-包膜(E)基因构建了相互嵌合的 WNV 和 SLEV 病毒,随后在此处使用生成的病毒接种三种不同的鸟类:家麻雀(HOSPs;Passer domesticus),家雀(Haemorhous mexicanus)和 AMCRs。还在 HOSPs 中评估了亲代和嵌合病毒之间的交叉保护免疫。结果表明,prM-E 基因在三种鸟类中的任何一种中都没有调节 WNV 和 SLEV 之间的病毒复制或毒力差异。然而,WNV-prME 蛋白确实决定了这些抗原异源病毒之间的交叉保护免疫。我们的数据提供了进一步的证据,证明了 WNV / SLEV 病毒非结构遗传元件在病毒复制、禽宿主易感性和毒力方面的重要作用。