Department of Microbiology-Immunology, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, Illinois, USA.
Department of Pediatrics, Division of Infectious Diseases, Ann and Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, USA.
J Infect Dis. 2022 Nov 1;226(9):1499-1509. doi: 10.1093/infdis/jiac151.
Herpes simplex virus (HSV) infection of the neonatal brain causes severe encephalitis and permanent neurologic deficits. However, infants infected with HSV at the time of birth follow varied clinical courses, with approximately half of infants experiencing only external infection of the skin rather than invasive neurologic disease. Understanding the cause of these divergent outcomes is essential to developing neuroprotective strategies. To directly assess the contribution of viral variation to neurovirulence, independent of human host factors, we evaluated clinical HSV isolates from neonates with different neurologic outcomes in neurologically relevant in vitro and in vivo models. We found that isolates taken from neonates with encephalitis are more neurovirulent in human neuronal culture and mouse models of HSV encephalitis, as compared to isolates collected from neonates with skin-limited disease. These findings suggest that inherent characteristics of the infecting HSV strain contribute to disease outcome following neonatal infection.
单纯疱疹病毒(HSV)感染新生儿的大脑会导致严重的脑炎和永久性神经功能缺陷。然而,出生时感染 HSV 的婴儿会出现不同的临床病程,大约一半的婴儿仅出现皮肤的外部感染,而不是侵袭性神经疾病。了解导致这些不同结果的原因对于开发神经保护策略至关重要。为了直接评估病毒变异对神经毒力的贡献,而不受人类宿主因素的影响,我们在神经相关的体外和体内模型中评估了具有不同神经学结局的新生儿的临床 HSV 分离株。我们发现,与从患有皮肤局限性疾病的新生儿中采集的分离株相比,从患有脑炎的新生儿中采集的分离株在人类神经元培养物和 HSV 脑炎的小鼠模型中具有更高的神经毒力。这些发现表明,感染的 HSV 株的固有特性会影响新生儿感染后的疾病结局。