| Literature DB >> 25803616 |
Nancy M Cladel1, Lynn R Budgeon1, Karla K Balogh1, Timothy K Cooper2, Jiafen Hu1, Neil D Christensen3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Papillomavirus disease and associated cancers remain a significant health burden in much of the world. The current protective vaccines, Gardasil and Cervarix, are expensive and not readily available to the underprivileged. In addition, the vaccines have not gained wide acceptance in the United States nor do they provide therapeutic value. Papillomaviruses are strictly species specific and thus human viruses cannot be studied in an animal host. An appropriate model for mucosal disease has long been sought. We chose to investigate whether the newly discovered mouse papillomavirus, MmuPV1, could infect mucosal tissues in Foxn1nu/Foxn1nu mice.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25803616 PMCID: PMC4372414 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0120128
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Representative whole mount of the mouse anogenital tract.
In this section the introitus (a) and cervix (b) as well as the entire vaginal tract are clearly seen.
Fig 2A-D H and E, in situ hybridization and immunohistochemistry at four time points.
A) Time point 9 weeks post infection. Vaginal lesions; ISH positive cells greatly outnumber IHC positive cells. 20X B) Time point 14 weeks post infection. Vaginal lesions exhibit greatly increased IHC signal. 20X C) Time point 25 weeks post infection. Endocervical canal and dorsal fornix. ISH positive squamous and mucous cells are present in the caudal canal. Only squamous cells are IHC positive. 20X D) Time point 30 weeks post infection. Cytologic atypia in the stratified squamous vaginal epithelium, 40X.
Fig 3Anal infection, 16 weeks post infection.
A) There is strong ISH positivity in cells near the anorectal junction (arrow) as well as strong IHC positivity. 10X. B) There is mild acanthosis and dysplasia in the haired (cutaneous) skin just dorsal to the anus. Both ISH and IHC are positive. 10X.
Fig 4Vaginal smear 24 weeks post infection.
A) Cytology. Highly cellular sample consisting of very large numbers of fully cornified anucleate squames and nucleated squamous cells. Frequent atypical squamous cells with ribbon- like central chromatin and abundant amphophilic cytoplasm (resembling inclusion). B) ISH and IHC are both positive for MmuPV1.
Animal models that have been or are currently being used for papillomavirus research; strengths and deficiencies are noted.
| Model | Strengths | Deficiencies |
|---|---|---|
| Bovine[ | Abundant production of virus. Different strains of virus, both mucosal and cutaneous. | Animals are too large to be practical for use in laboratory studies. |
| Primate[ | Closely allied with the human system. | High cost and challenging for many institutions. |
| Canine[ | Both mucosal and cutaneous. | Lesions regress rapidly. High cost. |
| Rabbit CRPV model[ | NZW rabbit is a docile laboratory animal. Cancers occur without applied cofactors. Both progressive and regressive strains are available. DNA is infectious. | Virus is cutaneous-tropic. Minimal virus is produced in the domestic rabbit. Wild rabbits, the natural host, are difficult to house and maintain. |
| Rabbit ROPV model [ | Mucosal virus infects both tongue and genital tissues. Natural host is the domestic rabbit. Lesions are highly productive of virus. | Lesions regress quickly. Virus is somewhat unstable and viral DNA is difficult to clone in bacteria.(unpublished observations) |
| Transgenic mouse models[ | Oncogenes E6 and E7 can be studied both separately and together. | The virus, itself, is not present in these animals. Oncogenes are expressed from heterologous promoters. |
| Mastomys coucha model[ | Genital tissues are among those infected. Animals are co-infected with McPV2 and MnPV allowing for study of dual infections. | Host is a wild rodent from Africa. There is a single outbred colony in the laboratory in Germany. |
| Pseudovirus infections in mouse and simian vaginal tissues[ | Early entry events can be studied using reporter gene encapsidated by human papillomavirus capsids. | NOT a virus infection, although often described as such. Reporter protein signal is transient and does not persist beyond 72 hours. |