Yadav Kush Kumar, Kenney Scott P
Center for Food Animal Health, Department of Veterinary Preventive Medicine, The Ohio State University, Wooster, OH 43210, USA.
Microorganisms. 2023 Feb 28;11(3):618. doi: 10.3390/microorganisms11030618.
One of the most intriguing issues in the hepatitis E virus (HEV) field is the significant increase in mortality rates of the mother and fetus when infection occurs in the second and third trimesters of gestation. A virus that is normally self-limiting and has a mortality rate of less than one percent in otherwise healthy individuals steeply rises by up to 30% in these pregnant populations. Answering this pivotal question has not been a simple task. HEV, in general, has been a difficult pathogen to understand in the laboratory setting. A historical lack of ability to efficiently propagate the virus in tissue culture models has led to many molecular aspects of the viral lifecycle being understudied. Although great strides have been made in recent years to adapt viruses to cell culture, this field remains behind other viruses that are much easier to replicate efficiently in vitro. Some of the greatest discoveries regarding HEV have come from using animal models for which naturally occurring strains of HEV have been identified, including pigs and chickens, but key limitations have made animal models imperfect for studying all aspects of human HEV infections. In addition to the difficulties working with HEV, pregnancy is a very complicated biological process with an elaborate interplay between many different host systems, including hormones, cardiovascular, kidneys, respiratory, gastrointestinal, epithelial, liver, metabolic, immune, and others. Significant differences between the timing and interplay of these systems are notable between species, and making direct comparisons between animals and humans can be difficult at times. No simple answer exists as to how HEV enhances mortality in pregnant populations. One of the best approaches to studying HEV in pregnancy is likely a combinatorial approach that uses the best combination of emerging in vitro and in vivo systems while accounting for the deficiencies that are present in each model. This review describes many of the current HEV animal model systems and the strengths and weaknesses of each as they apply to HEV pregnancy-associated mortality. We consider factors that are critical to analyzing HEV infection within the host and how, despite no perfect animal model for human pregnancy mortality existing, recent developments in HEV models, both in vitro and in vivo, are advancing our overall understanding of HEV in the pregnant host.
戊型肝炎病毒(HEV)领域最引人关注的问题之一是,妊娠中期和晚期感染该病毒时,母亲和胎儿的死亡率会显著上升。这种病毒通常具有自限性,在其他健康个体中的死亡率低于1%,但在这些孕妇群体中,死亡率会急剧上升至30%。回答这个关键问题并非易事。总体而言,HEV在实验室环境中一直是一种难以理解的病原体。过去在组织培养模型中有效传播该病毒的能力不足,导致病毒生命周期的许多分子层面未得到充分研究。尽管近年来在使病毒适应细胞培养方面取得了很大进展,但该领域仍落后于其他在体外更容易高效复制的病毒。关于HEV的一些重大发现来自使用已鉴定出自然存在的HEV毒株的动物模型,包括猪和鸡,但关键局限性使动物模型在研究人类HEV感染的所有方面并不完美。除了处理HEV存在困难外,怀孕是一个非常复杂的生物学过程,许多不同的宿主系统之间存在复杂的相互作用,包括激素、心血管、肾脏、呼吸、胃肠道、上皮、肝脏、代谢、免疫等系统。这些系统的时间安排和相互作用在不同物种之间存在显著差异,有时很难在动物和人类之间进行直接比较。关于HEV如何提高孕妇群体的死亡率,目前尚无简单答案。研究孕期HEV的最佳方法之一可能是采用组合方法,利用新兴的体外和体内系统的最佳组合,同时考虑每个模型中存在的缺陷。本综述描述了许多当前的HEV动物模型系统及其在HEV妊娠相关死亡率方面的优缺点。我们考虑了分析宿主内HEV感染的关键因素,以及尽管不存在用于人类妊娠死亡率的完美动物模型,但HEV模型在体外和体内的最新进展如何推动我们对孕妇宿主中HEV的整体理解。