| Literature DB >> 26989413 |
S V Cheresiz1, E A Semenova1, A A Chepurnov2.
Abstract
Establishment of small animal models of Ebola virus (EBOV) infection is important both for the study of genetic determinants involved in the complex pathology of EBOV disease and for the preliminary screening of antivirals, production of therapeutic heterologic immunoglobulins, and experimental vaccine development. Since the wild-type EBOV is avirulent in rodents, the adaptation series of passages in these animals are required for the virulence/lethality to emerge in these models. Here, we provide an overview of our several adaptation series in guinea pigs, which resulted in the establishment of guinea pig-adapted EBOV (GPA-EBOV) variants different in their characteristics, while uniformly lethal for the infected animals, and compare the virologic, genetic, pathomorphologic, and immunologic findings with those obtained in the adaptation experiments of the other research groups.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26989413 PMCID: PMC4775767 DOI: 10.1155/2016/8059607
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Virol ISSN: 1687-8639
Figure 1Adaptation series of wild-type Mayinga strain EBOV to guinea pigs and mice resulting in the establishment of 8mc, K-5, GLA, and GPA-P7 lethal guinea pig-adapted virus variants and a paradoxical high-titer, avirulent mouse-adapted virus variant D-5.
Comparison of lethality, virus reproduction, and the time to adaptation (# of passages) in different adaptation series.
| Adaptation series | 8mc | K-5 | GLA | GPA-P7 | [ | [ | D-5 | [ |
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| Original virus stock | Mayinga, ZEBOV | Mayinga, ZEBOV | Mayinga, ZEBOV | Mayinga, ZEBOV | Mayinga, ZEBOV | Mayinga, ZEBOV | Mayinga, ZEBOV | Mayinga, ZEBOV |
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| Preadaptation history | Vero E6 | NHPs + L68 cell line passages | NHPs + Vero cell line passages | Individual clone, obtained from infected Vero cells | Vero E6 | — | — | — |
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| Adaptation to | Guinea pig | Guinea pig | Guinea pig | Guinea pig | Guinea pig | Guinea pig | Mouse | Mouse |
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| Adapted virus lethality | 100% | 100% | 100% | 100% | 80% | 100% | 0% | 100% |
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| Number of passages to full lethality | 8 | 5 | 3 | 7 | 7 | 4 | 5 | 9 |
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| Increase in virus titer (nonadapted nonlethal versus adapted lethal, log10 PFU/mL) | 2.9/5.5 | 3.5/3.5 | 0.0/4.2 | 6.3/7.0 | 2.9/5.0 | 2.1/5.2 | 9.5/11.7 | 4.2/7.8 |
Note: all virus titers in our adaptation series 8mc, K-5, GLA, GPA-P7, and D-5 were determined on day 6 p/i.
Genetic changes occurring in different adaptation series and reverse genetics experiments and their relevance to the development of GPA-EBOV virulence/lethality.
| Viral ORF | Nucleotide position | Amino acid substitution | Relevance to adaptation | Comment |
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| NP | 1852 | None | No | Synonymous |
| 2410 | None | No | Synonymous | |
| 2411 | Phe → Leu(648) | Unlikely | Conservative, may play a supportive role in adaptation | |
| GP | 6924 (insertion) | Frameshift | No | Clones with or without those GP mutations do not differ from each other in their pathogenicity in guinea pigs |
| 7228 | Asp → Gly(397) | No | ||
| VP30 | 9595 | None | No | Located in 3′-untranslated region |
| VP24 | 10557 | Met → Ile(71) | Probably | At least, one of those three VP24 mutations induces major structural rearrangements in EBOV-8mc VP24, which are presented as gel mobility shift in electrophoresis |
| 10784 | Leu → Pro(147) | Probably | ||
| 10904 | Thr → Ile(187) | Probably | ||
| L | 14038 | Thr → Ala(820) | Unlikely | Conservative, may play a supportive role in adaptation |
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| VP24 | 10838 | Asp → Gly(165) | No | Is acquired in the course of passage in NHPs or L68 cells, prior to adaptation |
| 10907 | His → Tyr(186) | Probably | Acquired during adaptation, lies close to EBOV-8mc VP24 Thr → Ile(187) | |
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| NP | 1781 | Asn → His(438) | No | Is found in nonadapted pre-GPA clone |
| 2043 | Arg → Lys(525) | No | Is found in nonadapted pre-GPA clone | |
| 2092 | None | No | Synonymous | |
| 2100 | Leu → Arg(544) | No | Occurred at passage 1 after pre-GPA, before the acquisition of lethality | |
| 2164 | None | No | Synonymous | |
| 2166 | Asn → Ser(566) | Probably | Occurred at passage 3, when the first lethal outcome was recorded, heterogenous site until fixed at passage 5, concomitant with 40% lethality | |
| 2188 | None | No | Synonymous | |
| 2191 | None | No | Synonymous | |
| 2209 | None | No | Synonymous | |
| 2222 | None | No | Synonymous | |
| 2233 | None | No | Synonymous | |
| 2260 | None | No | Synonymous | |
| 2261 | Ser → Pro(598) | No | Occurred at passage 1 after pre-GPA, before the acquisition of lethality | |
| 2409 | Ser → Phe(647) | No | Is found in nonadapted pre-GPA clone | |
| VP40 | 2456 | Asp → Asn(663) | No | Occurred at passage 1 after pre-GPA, before the acquisition of lethality |
| 5576 | None | No | Synonymous | |
| VP24 | 5597 | None | No | Synonymous |
| 10557 | Met → Ile(71) | Probably | Occurred at passage 6, concomitant with lethality increase to 80% | |
| 10784 | Leu → Pro(147) | Probably | Occurred at passage 3, when the first lethal outcome was recorded, heterogenous site until fixed at passage 5, concomitant with 40% lethality | |
| 10805 | Arg → Leu(154) | Probably | Occurred at passage 7, concomitant with full lethality | |
| L | 12286 | Val → Ile(236) | Probably | Occurred at passage 7, concomitant with full lethality |
| 16821 | None | No | Synonymous | |
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| VP24 | 10422 | Leu → Phe(26) | Definitely | Derived from the blood of an animal, which died after inoculation with a nonlethal recombinant rEBOV-NP/8mc, F648L virus. When introduced into an otherwise wild-type Zaire EBOV genome by reverse genetics, this mutation alone confers full lethality to guinea pigs |
Figure 2Wild-type EBOV nonlethal infection in guinea pigs. Electron microscopy of the liver.
Figure 3GPA-EBOV lethal infection in guinea pigs. Electron microscopy of the liver.
Serum and peritoneal TNF activity in EBOV-infected guinea pigs and rabbits.
| Virus | Guinea pigs | Rabbits | |
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| Mayinga (wild-type) | 8mc, guinea pig-adapted | Mayinga (wild-type) | |
| TNF activity, serum (U/mL) | 3.4 ± 0.1 (day 7) | 2.5 ± 0.16 (day 7) | 104 ± 36 (day 3) |
| 471 ± 137 (day 5) | |||
| 1398 ± 909 (day 9) | |||
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| Virus titer, serum (PFU) | 103 | 104–105 | Nondetectable |
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| TNF activity, peritoneal (U/mL) | Nondetectable | Nondetectable | 15.3 ± 2.1 (days 5–9) |
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| Virus titer, peritoneal (PFU) | 102–103 | 102–103 | Nondetectable |
Figure 4Complement activity in the intact and prevaccinated guinea pigs infected with lethal GPA-EBOV-8mc strain or nonlethal wild-type EBOV Mayinga strain. Animals infected with nonlethal influenza virus A/Aichi/2/68 (H3N2) strain, intact animals, and guinea pigs vaccinated with inactivated nonlethal Mayinga strain EBOV while not infected were used as different controls of complement activity. Slow lagging dynamics of complement activity in guinea pigs infected with nonlethal Mayinga strain EBOV is contrasting to the rapid onset/drop peak of complement activity in the intact and prevaccinated animals infected with a lethal 8mc strain GPA-EBOV.