Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA.
mSphere. 2024 Oct 29;9(10):e0078323. doi: 10.1128/msphere.00783-23. Epub 2024 Oct 9.
Herpes simplex viruses (HSV-1 and HSV-2) most commonly cause ulcerative epithelial lesions (cold sores and genital herpes). Importantly, HSV establishes life-long persistent (latent) infection in peripheral neurons. Reactivation from latency produces recurrent epithelial lesions, which constitute the greatest burden of HSV disease in people. The mechanisms that regulate latency and reactivation remain incompletely understood, in part due to limitations in the animal models available for studying HSV reactivation. We have developed a simple and tractable model to induce HSV-1 and HSV-2 reactivation from latency to cause recurrent skin disease. We infected C57BL/6 mice with HSV-1 (strains NS, F, SC16, 17syn+) or HSV-2 (strain 333) on flank skin depilated by manual plucking. After at least 35 days post-infection (dpi), we replucked the fur from the infected flank and observed recurrent lesions in the same dermatome as the primary infection. We detected HSV DNA in dermatome skin through 4 days post-replucking and observed viral antigen and reporter signal in skin lesions by histology, consistent with viral replication following reactivation. In addition to C57BL/6 mice, we were able to produce reactivation in Balb/c and SKH-1 mice. We found that shaving the ipsilateral flank or plucking the contralateral flank did not induce recurrent skin lesions, suggesting that fur plucking is a specific stimulus that induces HSV reactivation. Furthermore, we were able to induce multiple rounds of plucking-induced recurrent disease, providing a model to investigate the lifelong nature of HSV infection. This new model provides a tractable system for studying pathogenic mechanisms of and therapeutic interventions against HSV reactivation and recurrent disease.
Herpes simplex viruses (HSV-1 and HSV-2) have infected over half of the US adult population to cause a lifelong, persistent infection; however, our understanding of the mechanisms that govern HSV reactivation and recurrent disease is incomplete. This is in part due to limitations in the animal models used to study recurrent disease, which are laborious and inefficient in mice. To address this technical gap, we developed a mouse model in which fur plucking after flank skin infection is sufficient to induce episodes of HSV reactivation and recurrent disease. Our work provides a model for the field to investigate the pathogenic mechanisms of HSV and immune responses during recurrent disease and provides an opportunity to investigate the neurobiology of HSV infection.
单纯疱疹病毒(HSV-1 和 HSV-2)最常引起溃疡性上皮病变(唇疱疹和生殖器疱疹)。重要的是,HSV 在周围神经元中建立终身持续性(潜伏)感染。从潜伏状态中重新激活会产生复发性上皮病变,这是 HSV 疾病在人群中最大的负担。调节潜伏和重新激活的机制仍不完全清楚,部分原因是用于研究 HSV 重新激活的动物模型存在局限性。我们开发了一种简单且易于处理的模型,可诱导 HSV-1 和 HSV-2 从潜伏状态重新激活,从而导致复发性皮肤疾病。我们通过手动拔毛将 HSV-1(NS、F、SC16、17syn+ 株)或 HSV-2(333 株)感染到 C57BL/6 小鼠的侧腹皮肤。感染后至少 35 天(dpi),我们从受感染的侧腹重新拔毛,并观察到与原发性感染相同皮区的复发性病变。我们通过组织学检测到皮肤皮区中的 HSV DNA,并观察到病毒抗原和报告信号在皮肤病变中的存在,这与重新激活后的病毒复制一致。除了 C57BL/6 小鼠,我们还能够在 Balb/c 和 SKH-1 小鼠中产生重新激活。我们发现,剃去同侧侧腹或拔去对侧侧腹不会引起复发性皮肤病变,这表明拔毛是一种诱导 HSV 重新激活的特定刺激。此外,我们能够诱导多次拔毛诱导的复发性疾病,为研究 HSV 感染的终身性质提供了模型。这种新模型为研究 HSV 重新激活和复发性疾病的致病机制和治疗干预措施提供了一个易于处理的系统。
单纯疱疹病毒(HSV-1 和 HSV-2)已感染了超过一半的美国成年人口,导致终身持续性感染;然而,我们对控制 HSV 重新激活和复发性疾病的机制的理解并不完整。这部分是由于用于研究复发性疾病的动物模型存在局限性,这些模型在小鼠中费力且效率低下。为了解决这一技术差距,我们开发了一种小鼠模型,在该模型中,在侧腹皮肤感染后拔毛足以诱导 HSV 重新激活和复发性疾病。我们的工作为该领域提供了一个模型,用于研究 HSV 复发性疾病期间的致病机制和免疫反应,并为研究 HSV 感染的神经生物学提供了机会。