| Literature DB >> 21658227 |
Bart Spiesschaert1, Grant McFadden, Katleen Hermans, Hans Nauwynck, Gerlinde R Van de Walle.
Abstract
Myxoma virus (MYXV) gained importance throughout the twentieth century because of the use of the highly virulent Standard Laboratory Strain (SLS) by the Australian government in the attempt to control the feral Australian population of Oryctolagus cuniculus (European rabbit) and the subsequent illegal release of MYXV in Europe. In the European rabbit, MYXV causes a disease with an exceedingly high mortality rate, named myxomatosis, which is passively transmitted by biting arthropod vectors. MYXV still has a great impact on European rabbit populations around the world. In contrast, only a single cutaneous lesion, restricted to the point of inoculation, is seen in its natural long-term host, the South-American Sylvilagus brasiliensis and the North-American S. Bachmani. Apart from being detrimental for European rabbits, however, MYXV has also become of interest in human medicine in the last two decades for two reasons. Firstly, due to the strong immune suppressing effects of certain MYXV proteins, several secreted virus-encoded immunomodulators (e.g. Serp-1) are being developed to treat systemic inflammatory syndromes such as cardiovascular disease in humans. Secondly, due to the inherent ability of MYXV to infect a broad spectrum of human cancer cells, the live virus is also being developed as an oncolytic virotherapeutic to treat human cancer. In this review, an update will be given on the current status of MYXV in rabbits as well as its potential in human medicine in the twenty-first century.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21658227 PMCID: PMC3131250 DOI: 10.1186/1297-9716-42-76
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vet Res ISSN: 0928-4249 Impact factor: 3.683
Figure 1MYXV worldwide distribution. The global distribution of MYXV during the period 01/07/2009-31/12/2009 (copied from [152).
Figure 2The pathogenesis of nodular myxomatosis. At the site of inoculation (A) viral replication occurs first in the peripheral epidermal cells and then in cells deeper in the dermis (B). This initially induces only a mild primary inflammation and mainly attracts neutrophils at early times. Resident Major Histocompatibility Complex-2 (MHC-2) positive cells, such as Langerhans cells, are also infected (C) [2,12,13]. When these cells migrate to the draining lymph node to present viral epitopes in the T-cell zone, they also traffic live virus and T-lymphocytes become infected with MYXV as well (D). This results in wide spread cell death in the T-cell zone of many lymphoid organs and also enables MYXV to spread in a cell-associated manner when these infected T-lymphocytes migrate through the blood and reticuloendothelial circulation. Once in the blood and lymph, MYXV spreads via infected leukocytes to different organs such as the liver, spleen, other distant lymph nodes, testis and epidermis (E). The MYXV replication in these organs induces a strong polymorphonuclear (PMN) cell-influx and in the skin secondary lesions are formed that contain high viral titers, favoring successful spread by mechanical vectors (F) [2,12].
Comparison of symptoms in wild and domestic rabbits infected with different MYXV strains inducing nodular myxomatosis (adapted from [7,11]).
| Day pi | Laboratory rabbits | Wild rabbits | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | |||||
| 2 | Pink & edematous inoculation site | Pink/edematous inoculation site | Pink inoculation site | ||
| 3 | Pink/edematous inoculation site | ||||
| 4 | Conjunctivitis | Conjunctivitis | Pink inoculation site | ||
| 5 | Secondary skin lesions | Conjunctivitis | |||
| 6 | Secondary skin lesions & anogenital edema | Serous eye discharge | Conjunctivitis & Anogenital edema | ||
| 7 | Respiratory distress | Mucopurulent eye discharge & purple/black inoculation site | Mild conjunctivitis | ||
| 8 | Necrotic inoculation site; Edematous eyelids; Respiratory distress | Secondary skin lesions | |||
| 9 | Secondary skin lesions | ||||
| 10 | Severe respiratory distress | Serous secretion from inoculation site | Respiratory distress | Respiratory distress | Mild anogenital edema; |
| 11 | Severe dyspnoea; Secondary lesions across the skin | ||||
| 12 | Lesion regression | ||||
| 13 | |||||
| 14 | |||||
| 15 | Improved breathing; Decreased anogenital edema | Lesion regression | |||
| 16 | |||||
| 17 | Lesion regression | ||||
| 18 | |||||
| 19 | |||||
| 20 | Still recovering | Virtually recovered | |||
: euthanasia of the experimentally infected animals due to too severe clinical symptoms; pi: post inoculation
Immunomodulatory proteins of MYXV.
| ORF | Protein name | Function | references |
|---|---|---|---|
| M002R/L | M-T2 | TNFR homolog; inhibits TNF/TNFR; prevents apoptosis of lymphocytes intracellularly | [ |
| M11L | Binds with Bak and/or Bax; inhibits apoptosis | [ | |
| M146R | Postulated to bind Bcl-2 proteins and inhibit TLR-mediated innate responses | [ | |
| M005R/L | M-T5 | Enhances degradation of CDK inhibitors; prevents checkpoint-induced apoptosis | [ |
| M150R | MNF | ANK-repeat protein; inhibits NF-κB | [ |
| M148R | ANK-repeat virulence factor, but no specific function defined to date | [ | |
| M149R | ANK-repeat virulence factor, but no specific function defined to date | [ | |
| M153R | MV-LAP | Downregulates cell surface CD4, Fas-CD95 and MHC-1 | [ |
| M143 | Ubiquitin ligase with a possible anti-apoptotic function | [ | |
| M004R/L | M-T4 | Possible interference with BAP31 in the ER; apoptosis inhibitor | [ |
| M156R | PKR pseudosubstrate and inhibitor | [ | |
| M029L | Predicted inhibitor of PKR via dsRNA binding | [ | |
| M062R | Host range factor essential for replication in rabbit or human cancer cells; binds SAMD9 | [ | |
| M063R | Host range factor, essential for replication in rabbit cells | [ | |
| M064R | Related to M062 and M064 host range factors but function not yet determined | [ | |
| M001R/L | M-T1 | CC-chemokine binding protein | [ |
| M104L | Postulated inhibitor of chemokine receptor signaling | [ | |
| M007R/L | M-T7 | Secreted inhibitor of IFN-γ and chemokines; anti-inflammatory activities | [ |
| M008R/L | Serp-1 | Secreted serpin that inhibits diverse host serine proteases; anti-inflammatory activities | [ |
| M151R | Serp-2 | Intracellular serpin that inhibits ICE and granzyme B | [ |
| M152R | Serp-3 | Serpin and virulence factor, but no specific host target yet described | [ |
| M141R | vCD200 | Cell surface virulence factor that inhibits CD200R+ leukocytes (also called vOX-2) | [ |
| M121R/M122R | Predicted NK regulatory receptor homologs | [ | |
| M128L | vCD47 | Cell surface virulence factor and CD47 homolog | [ |
| M13L | Pyrin-containing protein that inhibits the inflammasomes and NF-κB signaling | [ | |
| M129R | Predicted HIV gp120 homolog, but function still unknown | [ | |
| M130R | Predicted HIV Tat homolog; virulence factor | [ | |
| M010L | MGF | Secreted virulence factor, related to TGFalpha and EGF | [ |
| M135R | B19R (VACV) homolog, virulence factor, but no specific function or ligand known | [ | |
| M144R | C3L/B5R (VACV) homolog, no confirmed function yet | [ |
Clinically adapted MYXV proteins for treating inflammatory diseases.
| Gene product | Potential clinical use | References |
|---|---|---|
| Serp-1 | Secreted serpin that effectively inhibits vascular inflammatory responses and has been tested in human clinical trials to treat acute coronary syndrome. | [ |
| Serp-2 | Viral anti-apoptotic serpin effective in animal models but not yet tested in humans. | [ |
| M-T1 | Chemokine inhibitor that reduces the allograft rejection and stabilizes plaque formation during artherosclerosis. | [ |
| M-T7 | Chemokine inhibitor that attenuates systemic inflammatory responses and inhibits leukocyte infiltration, thus preventing transplant rejection. | [ |
| M-T2 | TNF/TNFR inhibitor but not yet tested as a potential therapeutic. | [ |