| Literature DB >> 28194148 |
Keita Matsuno1, Yasuko Orba2, Kimberly Maede-White3, Dana Scott3, Friederike Feldmann3, Mifang Liang4, Hideki Ebihara5.
Abstract
The pathogenesis of clinical manifestations caused by newly emerging tick-borne phleboviruses [i.e., Severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome virus (SFTSV) and Heartland virus (HRTV)], such as severe thrombocytopenia and lymphocytopenia, are not yet fully understood. In the present study, to establish an animal model mimicking the profile of fatal human cases, we examined the susceptibilities of adult mice from 12 strains, aged mice from two strains, and cynomolgus macaques to SFTSV and/or HRTV infections. However, none of these immunocompetent animals developed lethal diseases after infection with SFTSV or HRTV. Thus, we tested a lethal animal model of SFTSV infection using interferon-α/β receptor knock-out (IFNAR-/-) mice to identify the target cell(s) of virus infection, as well as lesions that are potentially associated with hematological changes. IbaI-positive macrophages and Pax5-positive immature B cells overlapped with SFTSV-positive cells in the spleen and lymph nodes of IFNAR-/- mice, and IbaI-SFTSV-double positive cells were also observed in the liver and kidney, thereby suggesting crucial roles for macrophages in the pathogenesis of SFTSV infection in mice. In the mandibular lymph nodes and spleens of infected mice, we observed extensive necrosis comprising B220-positive B cells, which may be associated with severe lymphocytopenia. The results of this study suggest a resemblance between the IFNAR-/- mouse model and lethal infections in humans, as well as roles for multiple cells during pathogenesis in mice.Entities:
Keywords: aged mouse; disease modeling; heartland virus; immunocompromised mouse; mouse; nonhuman primate; severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome virus
Year: 2017 PMID: 28194148 PMCID: PMC5276813 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2017.00104
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
Summary of animal models of human-pathogenic tick-borne phleboviruses.
| Virus | Animal | Strain | Outcome/Disease | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SFTSV | Mouse | 129S1/SvlmJ | Non-lethal | Present study |
| 129S1/SvlmJ (aged 1 yr) | Non-lethal | Present study | ||
| IFNAR-/- 129/Sv | Lethal | |||
| A/J | Non-lethal | Present study | ||
| BALB/c | Non-lethal | |||
| BALB/c (newborn) | Lethal | |||
| BXD34/TyJ | Non-lethal | Present study | ||
| BXD68/RwwJ | Non-lethal | Present study | ||
| C57BL/6 | Non-lethal weight loss | |||
| C57BL/6 (newborn) | Lethal | |||
| C57BL/6 (aged 1 year) | Non-lethal weight loss | Present study | ||
| C57BL/6 (aged 2 year) | Non-lethal weight loss | Present study | ||
| C57BL/6 (mitomycin C treatment) | Lethal | |||
| IFNAR-/- C57BL/6 | Lethal | |||
| CAST/EiJ | Non-lethal | Present study | ||
| CD-1 | Non-lethal | |||
| CD-1 (newborn) | Non-lethal | |||
| DBA/1J | Non-lethal | Present study | ||
| DBA/2J | Non-lethal | Present study | ||
| FVB/NJ | Non-lethal | Present study | ||
| Kunming | Non-lethal | |||
| Kunming (newborn) | Lethal | |||
| NZBWF1/J | Non-lethal | Present study | ||
| SJL/J | Non-lethal | Present study | ||
| Hamster | Syrian hamster | Non-lethal | ||
| Golden hamster | Non-lethal | |||
| Golden hamster (newborn) | Non-lethal | |||
| Rat | Wistar | Non-lethal | ||
| Wistar (newborn) | Non-lethal | |||
| Rhesus macaque | Non-lethal | |||
| Cynomolgus macaque | Non-lethal | Present study | ||
| HRTV | Cynomolgus macaque | Non-lethal | Present study |
Comparison of histopathological characteristics of SFTSV models and patients.
| Model | Time to death | Lymph node | Spleen | Bone marrow | Liver | Kidney | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| C57BL/6 IFNAR-/- | 5–7 days | Histiocytic necrotizing lymphadenitis | Histiocytic necrotizing lymphadenitis | Increasing the myeloid/erythroid ratio | Diffuse infiltration by inflammatory cells | Antigen-positive large mononuclear cells | |
| Loss of lymphoid follicles in the cortex | Loss of white pulp | Moderate necrosis collocating with edema and fibrin | Focal necrosis with slight inflammatory cell infiltration | ||||
| Antigen-positive swollen Kupffer cells | |||||||
| 129/Sv IFNAR-/- | 2–3 days | Antigen-positive mononuclear cells | Not significant | ||||
| C57BL/6 | – | Marked increase in megakaryocytes | Significantly increased megakaryocytes | Ballooning degeneration of hepatocytes | Glomerular hypercellularity | ||
| Decreased lymphocyte cellularity in the red pulp | Scattered necrosis | Mesangial thickening | |||||
| Multifocal pyknosis, karyorrhexis, and karyokysis | Congestion in Bowman’s space | ||||||
| Newborn | 7–13 days | Large necrotic areas | |||||
| Large amount of mononuclear cells | |||||||
| Rhesus macaque | – | Multiple scattered loci with hepatocyte necrosis | Glomerular hypercellularity | ||||
| Mesangial thickening | |||||||
| Congestion in Bowman’s space | |||||||
| Human (fatalities) | Necrotizing lymphadenitis with extensive necrosis | Prominent hemophagocytosis | Prominent hemophagocytosis | Mild microvesicular fatty changes | Subepithelial hemorrhage within the renal pelvis | ||
| Infitration by histiocytes and immunoblasts | Histiocytic hypocellular | Inflammation of lymphocytes and macrophages | |||||
| Prominent hemophagocytosis | Globular necroses and mild portal fibrosis |