Literature DB >> 29360968

Porcine parvovirus infection impairs progesterone production in luteal cells through mitogen-activated protein kinases, p53, and mitochondria-mediated apoptosis.

Liang Zhang1, Zhenyu Wang1, Jie Zhang1, Xiaomao Luo1, Qian Du1, Lingling Chang1, Xiaomin Zhao1, Yong Huang1, Dewen Tong1.   

Abstract

Porcine parvovirus (PPV) is a major virus that leads to fetal death in swine. However, the effects of PPV infection on sows are poorly understood. The aim of this study was to investigate the effects of PPV on porcine steroidogenic luteal cells (SLCs) survival and functions and underlying mechanisms. In vivo experiment results showed that artificial infection of PPV significantly reduced the concentration of serum progesterone and induced histopathological lesions and SLCs apoptosis in porcine corpora luteum. In in vitro cultured primary porcine SLCs, PPV could infect and replicate in SLCs and induced SLCs apoptosis through mitochondria, but not the death receptor, mediated apoptosis pathway. Meanwhile, PPV infection also decreased progesterone production in SLCs. Moreover, PPV infection could increase active p53 transcriptional activity and protein expression as well as promoting p53 translocation to nucleus. Using the p53-specific pharmacological inhibitor (pifithrin-α) and siRNA could partially attenuate PPV-induced Bax upregulation, caspase-3 activation, apoptosis, and the reduction of progesterone production in primary porcine SLCs. Furthermore, the phosphorylation of p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) was also increased in PPV-infected SLCs. Pretreatment with p38 MAPK inhibitor (SB203580) suppressed PPV-induced p53 accumulation and translocation, SLCs apoptosis, and progesterone production reduction. In summary, these findings indicate that PPV could induce SLCs apoptosis and a decrease of progesterone production in vivo and in vitro via p38 MAPK signaling and p53-dependent mitochondrial pathway, which provides the potential clinical therapy methods for PPV infection.

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Year:  2018        PMID: 29360968     DOI: 10.1093/biolre/ioy014

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biol Reprod        ISSN: 0006-3363            Impact factor:   4.285


  2 in total

1.  Viral Nonstructural Protein 1 Induces Mitochondrion-Mediated Apoptosis in Mink Enteritis Virus Infection.

Authors:  Peng Lin; Yuening Cheng; Shanshan Song; Jianming Qiu; Li Yi; Zhigang Cao; Jianrong Li; Shipeng Cheng; Jianke Wang
Journal:  J Virol       Date:  2019-10-29       Impact factor: 5.103

2.  Porcine parvovirus triggers autophagy through the AMPK/Raptor/mTOR pathway to promote viral replication in porcine placental trophoblasts.

Authors:  Xiujuan Zhang; Peipei Ma; Ting Shao; Yingli Xiong; Qian Du; Songbiao Chen; Bichen Miao; Xuezhi Zhang; Xiaoya Wang; Yong Huang; Dewen Tong
Journal:  Vet Res       Date:  2022-05-03       Impact factor: 3.829

  2 in total

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