| Literature DB >> 30611287 |
Amanda L Phelps1, Lyn M O'Brien2, Lin S Eastaugh2, Carwyn Davies2, Mark S Lever2, Jane Ennis3, Larry Zeitlin3, Alejandro Nunez4, David O Ulaeto2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Eastern equine encephalitis virus is an alphavirus that naturally cycles between mosquitoes and birds or rodents in Eastern States of the US. Equine infection occurs by being bitten by cross-feeding mosquitoes, with a case fatality rate of up to 75% in humans during epizootic outbreaks. There are no licensed medical countermeasures, and with an anticipated increase in mortality when exposed by the aerosol route based on anecdotal human data and experimental animal data, it is important to understand the pathogenesis of this disease in pursuit of treatment options. This report details the clinical and pathological findings of mice infected with EEEV by the aerosol route, and use as a model for EEEV infection in humans.Entities:
Keywords: Aerosol; Alphavirus; EEEV; Eastern equine encephalitis virus; MLD; Model; Mouse; Pathogenicity
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30611287 PMCID: PMC6321726 DOI: 10.1186/s12985-018-1103-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Virol J ISSN: 1743-422X Impact factor: 4.099
Fig. 1Correlation between input (Collison) and output (Impinger) virus titres of EEEV Pe-6 when aerosolized using an AeroMP platform. n = 3 for each of three independent experiments
Calculated presented challenge dose of EEEV (Pe-6) to groups of female Balb/c mice, with subsequent survival and clinical data. Each aerosol challenge utilised 10 mL of fresh virus preparations, in a 10 mins nose-only aerosol exposure
| INPUT Collison (pfu/ml) | OUTPUT Impinger (pfu/ml) | Calc. Presented Dose (pfu/mouse) | Survival (%) | Mean Time to Death (days) | Max. mean weight loss (%) a, b | Max. mean clinical score a, b | Max. viral load in brain (Log10 pfu/g)c |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.0E+ 00 | 0.0E+ 00 | MOCK | 8/8 (100) | – | 1.2, n/a | 0.0, n/a | – |
| 1.6E+ 02 | 0.0E+ 00 | 0.0E+ 00 | 8/8 (100) | – | 0.1, n/a | 0.0, n/a | – |
| 1.8E+ 03 | 6.0E+ 00 | 1.0E+ 00 | 8/8 (100) | – | 0.6, n/a | 0.0, n/a | – |
| 2.3E+ 04 | 4.4E+ 01 | 7.0E+ 00 | 8/8 (100) | – | 1.0, n/a | 0.0, n/a | – |
| 1.9E+ 05 | 1.4E+ 02 | 2.4E+ 01 | 7/8 (88) | 3.1 | 2.0, 11.6 | 0.5, 4.0 | 9.9 ( |
| 3.1E+ 06 | 2.5E+ 03 | 4.3E+ 02 | 3/8 (38) | 4.2 | 6.4, 13.3 | 3.3, 8.0 | 9.7 ( |
| 2.0E+ 08 | 1.7E+ 04 | 2.8E+ 03 | 0/8 (0) | 3.0 | 12.9, 12.9 | 4.6, 4.6 | 9.5 ( |
aMean values obtained for all mice in the group regardless of clinical condition
bMean values obtained for mice observed to have observable or pronounced clinical signs
cValues obtained from brains excised on the day mice succumbed to disease (i.e. day 3–4 post challenge)
Fig. 2Experimental outcomes in Balb/c mice exposed by the aerosol route to a dose range of EEEV Pe-6, or challenge media controls (CM alone). Top left panel; percentage survival post- challenge. Top right panel; percentage change in body weight (from weight taken on day 0 prior to challenge). Bottom left panel; mean clinical scores. Bottom right panel; mean viral titre in tissues of animals that succumbed to disease 3–4 days post-challenge. The legends refer to the titres of input virus (pfu/ml). Data points include mice that were free of clinical signs. Error bars indicate 95% confidence interval. n = 8 except for the bottom right panel, where n = 1–5
Fig. 3Mean viral load of EEEV Pe-6 in Balb/c mice exposed to 5.5 x MLD by the aerosol route. Error bars indicate 95% confidence interval, n = 2–22
Fig. 4Groups of Balb/c mice were challenged with EEEV Pe-6 by the aerosol route and culled at pre-determined time-points, culled on welfare grounds, or were found dead. Histopathology (a) and immuno-histochemical demonstration of EEEV virus (b) images were obtained from multiple animals, represented here by two mice that illustrate key histopathological features of disease. Mice exposed to CM alone (mock infected) were found to have neuronal tissues within normal limits, with distinct nuclei in well-defined neuronal layers, as well as clear white matter tracts and nerves that were strongly eosinophilic in the olfactory bulb. Neurons were not vacuolated and perivascular spaces were also within normal limits for these tissues 1 day post-challenge. Mice exposed to EEEV presented with severe meningoencephalitis with cell death and degenerative changes in neurons and leukocytes in the encephalon, with marked rarefaction and/or oedema of the tissue by day 3 post-challenge. In the olfactory bulb, there was an abundance of shrunken neurons and cell debris (arrows), and rarefaction of the neural tissue (*). In the piriform cortex, there was abundant pyknotic and karyorrhectic debris in the vessel wall (*) and in the CNS (arrows), as well as considerable changes in the perivascular spaces of the meninges (M). Contralateral piriform cortex sections demonstrate EEEV-specific labelling in neurons (*). The hippocampus had marked vacuolation (*) and clear expansion of perivascular spaces (arrows), with diffuse EEEV-specific labelling of neuronal populations (*). Other tissues with diffuse EEEV-specific labelling included the cortex, hippocampus and thalamus. In the pons region of the brain there was a focal area of spongiosis/vacuolation (*), as well as neuronal degeneration, necrosis and abundant pyknotic and karyorrhectic debris (arrows). The mandibular lymph node (LN) displayed numerous tingible body macrophages (arrows) and had a marked increase in apoptopic bodies