| Literature DB >> 26790932 |
Tian-Cheng Li1, Tingting Yang2, Sayaka Yoshizaki3, Yasushi Ami4, Yuriko Suzaki4, Koji Ishii3, Noriko Kishida5, Masayuki Shirakura5, Hideki Asanuma5, Naokazu Takeda6, Takaji Wakita3.
Abstract
Ferret hepatitis E virus (HEV), a novel hepatitis E virus, has been identified in ferrets. However, the pathogenicity of ferret HEV remains unclear. In the present study, we compared the HEV RNA-positivity rates and alanine aminotransferase (ALT) levels of 63 ferrets between before and after import from the US to Japan. We found that the ferret HEV-RNA positivity rates were increased from 12.7% (8/63) to 60.3% (38/63), and ALT elevation was observed in 65.8% (25/38) of the ferret HEV RNA-positive ferrets, indicating that ferret HEV infection is responsible for liver damage. From long term-monitoring of ferret HEV infection we determined that this infection in ferrets exhibits three patterns: sub-clinical infection, acute hepatitis, and persistent infection. The ALT elevation was also observed in ferret HEV-infected ferrets in a primary infection experiment. These results indicate that the ferret HEV infection induced acute hepatitis and persistent infection in ferrets, suggesting that the ferrets are a candidate animal model for immunological as well as pathological studies of hepatitis E.Entities:
Keywords: ALT; AST; Animal model; Ferret HEV; Persistent infection
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26790932 DOI: 10.1016/j.vetmic.2015.11.014
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vet Microbiol ISSN: 0378-1135 Impact factor: 3.293