RRC ID 30662
著者 Aoki K, Shimada S, Simantini DS, Tun MM, Buerano CC, Morita K, Hayasaka D.
タイトル Type-I interferon response affects an inoculation dose-independent mortality in mice following Japanese encephalitis virus infection.
ジャーナル Virol J
Abstract BACKGROUND:The laboratory mouse model is commonly employed to study the pathogenesis of encephalitic flaviviruses such as Japanese encephalitis virus (JEV). However, it is known that some strains of these viruses do not elicit a typical mortality dose response curve from this organism after peripheral infection and the reason for it has not yet been fully understood. It is suggested that induction of more vigorous Type-I IFN (IFN-I) response might control early virus dissemination following increasing infectious challenge doses of the virus. Thus, the objective of this study was to examine this suggested role of IFN-I in the mortality of mice infected with various doses of JEV.
METHODS:Inbred 129 mice and their IFNAR KO (A129) mice were subcutaneously inoculated with 100, 102, 104 or 106 pfu of JaOArS982 strain of JEV. Mice were weighed daily and observed for clinical signs. Virus titers in the brains and spleens of JEV-infected mice were determined by plaque forming assays. The upregulated mRNA levels of genes related to IFN-I response of mice were examined by real-time PCR.
RESULTS:The mortality rates of 129 mice infected with JaOArS982 did not significantly increase despite the increase in inoculation dose and no significant difference of viral loads was observed between their brains. However, there was clear elevation of the mRNA levels of interferon regulatory factor (IRF)3, IRF7, IRF9, MDA5 and RIG-I at 24 hours post-infection depending on the inoculation dose. In A129 mice, length of survival days and the viral loads of spleen and brain were observed to be inoculation dose-dependent.
CONCLUSIONS:From these results, it is suggested that early IFN-I response elicited by high inoculation doses of JEV provides an anti-viral effect during the early phase of infection. Accordingly, virus replication is counteracted by IFN-I response at each increasing inoculation dose resulting in the interference of impending severe disease course or fatal outcome; hence, this might explain the inoculation dose-independent mortality in mice caused by Japanese encephalitis virus.
巻・号 11
ページ 105
公開日 2014-6-5
DOI 10.1186/1743-422X-11-105
PII 1743-422X-11-105
PMID 24903089
PMC PMC4074870
MeSH Animals Brain / virology Disease Models, Animal Encephalitis Virus, Japanese / immunology* Encephalitis, Japanese / immunology* Encephalitis, Japanese / mortality Encephalitis, Japanese / pathology* Gene Expression Profiling Interferon Type I / immunology* Mice, 129 Strain Mice, Knockout Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction Spleen / virology Survival Analysis Viral Load Viral Plaque Assay
IF 2.579
引用数 9
WOS 分野 VIROLOGY
リソース情報
実験動物マウス RBRC01023