Department of Neurology, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, Colorado, USA.
Department of Immunology and Microbiology, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, Colorado, USA.
J Virol. 2024 Jul 23;98(7):e0039724. doi: 10.1128/jvi.00397-24. Epub 2024 Jun 13.
Enterovirus D68 (EV-D68) is an emerging pathogen that can cause severe respiratory and neurologic disease [acute flaccid myelitis (AFM)]. Intramuscular (IM) injection of neonatal Swiss Webster (SW) mice with US/IL/14-18952 (IL52), a clinical isolate from the 2014 EV-D68 epidemic, results in many of the pathogenic features of human AFM, including viral infection of the spinal cord, death of motor neurons, and resultant progressive paralysis. In distinction, CA/14-4231 (CA4231), another clinical isolate from the 2014 EV-D68 outbreak, does not cause paralysis in mice, does not grow in the spinal cord, and does not cause motor neuron loss following IM injection. A panel of chimeric viruses containing sequences from IL52 and CA4231 was used to demonstrate that VP1 is the main determinant of EV-D68 neurovirulence following IM injection of neonatal SW mice. VP1 contains four amino acid differences between IL52 and CA4231. Mutations resulting in substituting these four amino acids (CA4231 residues into the IL52 polyprotein) completely abolished neurovirulence. Conversely, mutations resulting in substituting VP1 IL52 amino acid residues into the CA4231 polyprotein created a virus that induced paralysis to the same degree as IL52. Neurovirulence following infection of neonatal SW mice with parental and chimeric viruses was associated with viral growth in the spinal cord.
Emerging viruses allow us to investigate mutations leading to increased disease severity. Enterovirus D68 (EV-D68), once the cause of rare cases of respiratory illness, recently acquired the ability to cause severe respiratory and neurologic disease. Chimeric viruses were used to demonstrate that viral structural protein VP1 determines growth in the spinal cord, motor neuron loss, and paralysis following intramuscular (IM) injection of neonatal Swiss Webster (SW) mice with EV-D68. These results have relevance for predicting the clinical outcome of future EV-D68 epidemics as well as targeting retrograde transport as a potential strategy for treating virus-induced neurologic disease.
肠道病毒 D68(EV-D68)是一种新兴病原体,可导致严重的呼吸道和神经系统疾病[急性弛缓性脊髓炎(AFM)]。将美国/伊利诺伊州/14-18952(IL52),即来自 2014 年 EV-D68 流行的临床分离株,肌肉内(IM)注射给新生的瑞士 Webster(SW)小鼠,可导致许多人类 AFM 的致病特征,包括脊髓病毒感染、运动神经元死亡,以及由此导致的进行性瘫痪。与此形成鲜明对比的是,另一种来自 2014 年 EV-D68 暴发的临床分离株 CA/14-4231(CA4231),不会导致小鼠瘫痪,在脊髓中不生长,并且在 IM 注射后不会导致运动神经元丧失。包含来自 IL52 和 CA4231 序列的嵌合病毒的一个小组被用来证明,在新生 SW 小鼠的 IM 注射后,VP1 是 EV-D68 神经毒力的主要决定因素。VP1 在 IL52 和 CA4231 之间包含四个氨基酸差异。导致这些四个氨基酸取代(CA4231 残基取代 IL52 多蛋白)的突变完全消除了神经毒力。相反,导致将 VP1 IL52 氨基酸残基取代为 CA4231 多蛋白的突变创建了一种能够引起与 IL52 相同程度瘫痪的病毒。新生 SW 小鼠感染亲本和嵌合病毒后的神经毒力与脊髓中的病毒生长有关。
新兴病毒使我们能够研究导致疾病严重程度增加的突变。肠道病毒 D68(EV-D68)曾经是罕见呼吸道疾病的病因,最近获得了导致严重呼吸道和神经系统疾病的能力。嵌合病毒被用来证明病毒结构蛋白 VP1 决定了 EV-D68 在新生瑞士 Webster(SW)小鼠肌肉内(IM)注射后的脊髓生长、运动神经元丧失和瘫痪。这些结果对于预测未来 EV-D68 流行的临床结果以及将逆行转运作为治疗病毒引起的神经疾病的潜在策略具有相关性。