实验性大白齿鼩(Crocidura russula)感染博尔纳病病毒 1:病毒传播和脱落的启示

Daniel Nobach, Leif Raeder, Jana Mueller, Sibylle Herzog, Markus Eickmann, Christiane Herden
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摘要

感染博尔纳病病毒 1(BoDV1)导致的人类脑炎病例在流行地区不断增加。BoDV1的蓄积宿主是双色白齿鼩,尽管很少发现其他种类鼩鼱的自然感染个体。为了建立一个可靠的实验贮库模型,15只大白齿鼩通过不同的接种途径(脑内、鼻内、口腔、皮下、腹腔)感染了来自鼩鼱的BoDV1分离株,并进行了长达41天的监测。除口服途径外,所有其他动物(12/15)均成功感染,其中大多数动物表现出暂时性采食量减少和体重下降,但未出现炎症病变。从 11/12 只感染动物体内分离出了传染性病毒。通过 RT-qPCR 在中枢神经系统(CNS)和大多数器官中发现了病毒 RNA。免疫组化在中枢神经系统和外周神经的神经元和星形胶质细胞中发现了 BoDV1 抗原。中枢神经系统和脊髓中的高病毒载量表明,病毒从外周扩散到中枢神经系统以加强病毒复制,随后离心扩散到具有分泌和排泄功能的器官。总之,鼩鼱成功感染 BoDV1 病毒的实验证明了其作为动物模型的有用性,有助于进一步研究病毒的维持、传播、致病机理以及人类外溢感染的风险评估。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Experimental Infection of greater white-toothed Shrews (Crocidura russula) with Borna disease virus 1: Insights into Viral Spread and Shedding
Numbers of human encephalitis cases caused by infection with Borna disease virus 1 (BoDV1) increase continuously in endemic areas. The reservoir host of BoDV1 is the bicoloured white-toothed shrew, albeit few naturally infected individuals of other shrew species have been detected. To establish a reliable experimental reservoir model, 15 greater white-toothed shrews were infected with a shrew-derived BoDV1 isolate by different inoculation routes (intracerebral, intranasal, oral, subcutaneous, intraperitoneal) and monitored up to 41 days. Except for the oral route all other animals (12/15) were successfully infected, and the majority of them displayed temporary reduced feed intake and loss of body weight but no inflammatory lesions. Infectious virus was isolated from 11/12 infected animals. Viral RNA was demonstrated by RT-qPCR in the central nervous system (CNS) and the majority of organs. Immunohistochemistry demonstrated BoDV1 antigen in neurons and astrocytes in the CNS and peripheral nerves. High viral loads in the CNS and the spinal cord points towards spread from periphery to the CNS to enhance viral replication, and subsequent centrifugal spread to organs capable of secretion and excretions. In general, successful experimental BoDV1 infection of shrews proves their usefulness as animal model, enabling further studies on maintenance, transmission, pathogenesis, and risk assessment for human spill-over infections.
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