| Literature DB >> 31261754 |
Aura R Garrison1,2, Darci R Smith3,4, Joseph W Golden5,6.
Abstract
Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever virus (CCHFV) is an important tick-borne human pathogen endemic throughout Asia, Africa and Europe. CCHFV is also an emerging virus, with recent outbreaks in Western Europe. CCHFV can infect a large number of wild and domesticated mammalian species and some avian species, however the virus does not cause severe disease in these animals, but can produce viremia. In humans, CCHFV infection can lead to a severe, life-threating disease characterized by hemodynamic instability, hepatic injury and neurological disorders, with a worldwide lethality rate of ~20-30%. The pathogenic mechanisms of CCHF are poorly understood, largely due to the dearth of animal models. However, several important animal models have been recently described, including novel murine models and a non-human primate model. In this review, we examine the current knowledge of CCHF-mediated pathogenesis and describe how animal models are helping elucidate the molecular and cellular determinants of disease. This information should serve as a reference for those interested in CCHFV animal models and their utility for evaluation of medical countermeasures (MCMs) and in the study of pathogenesis.Entities:
Keywords: Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever virus; animal models; medical countermeasures; pathogenesis
Year: 2019 PMID: 31261754 PMCID: PMC6669593 DOI: 10.3390/v11070590
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Viruses ISSN: 1999-4915 Impact factor: 5.048
CCHFV animal models.
| Animal Model | Virus Strain(s) | Virus Dose | Route(s) of Infection | % lethality | Time to Death [days] | Salient Features | REF |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Neonatal mice | IbAr 10200 | 100 Lethal-dose units | IP | 100 | 3 d | Do not predict immunotherapeutic protection behavior in adult rodents, Ribavirin protects against lethality | [ |
| STAT-1−/− mice | IbAr 10200, Turkey-2004 | 10-1000 PFU | SC, IP | 20–100 | 3–6 d | hepatic injury, subunit vaccines may not protect well in this model. 10 PFUtick dose is only 20% lethal, higher doses uniformly lethal | [ |
| IFNAR−/− mice | IbAr 10200, Afg09-2990, Hoti | 10-10,000 TCID50 or PFU | SC, IP, IN, IM | >90 | 4–8 d | Prototypical rodent model for CCHFV, C57BL/6 or 129 background develop severe disease. Strain Hoti has a reduced MTD | [ |
| IFNAR−/−, IFNAGR−/− mice | Ank-2 | 100 TCID50 | IP | 100 | 4–6 d | Used to evaluate N subunit vaccines | [ |
| C57BL/6, BALB/c, B6:129 | IbAr 10200, Afg09-2990, Hoti | 100 PFU | SC, IP | >90 (IFN-I blockade) | 5 d | No disease ensues unless IFN-I signaling is blocked by antibody (MAR1-5A3) | [ |
| Rag2−/− mice | Afg09-2990, Hoti | 100 PFU | IP | 100 | 4–5 d after disruption of IFN-I signaling | Hepatitis in mice with active IFN-I signaling, disruption of IFN-I signaling results in 100% lethality similar to normal mice | [ |
| SGM3 Humanized mice | Turkey-2004, Oman-199809166 | 1 × 104 TCID50 | IP | 0 or 100 | 15–23 d | Neurological disease ensues absent of systemic (visceral) disease. Only strain Turkey produced severe disease and lethality. Oman is not lethal | [ |
| Cynomolgus Macaques | Hoti, Afg09-2990 | 5log10 TCID50 and 1 × 106 PFU | IV, SC and IV/SC combo | 0–60 | 6–7 d | Disease model with fever, increased liver enzymes, thrombocytopenia, leukocytopenia. In some studies animals meet euthanasia criteria | [ |
Strains of nairoviruses used in animal systems.
| Virus | Strain | Origin | Passage History | Animal Model | REF |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| IbAr 10200 | 1966, tick-isolate ( | 9× SMB 1, 3× HepG2 2 | Mice | [ |
| Afg09-2990 | 2009, human-isolate, fatal case, Afghanistan | 3× Vero 2, 2× Huh7 2 | Mice, NHP | [ | |
| Kosova Hoti | 2001, human isolate, fatal case, Kosovo | 2× VeroE6 2 | Mice, NHP | [ | |
| Oman-199809166 | 1998, human-isolate, outcome unknown, Oman | 2× VeroE6, 1× SW13 2 | Mice | [ | |
| Turkey-200406546 | 2004, human-isolate, outcome unknown, Turkey | 1× SMB, 1× SW13 | Mice | [ | |
| Ank-2 | 2012, human-isolate, outcome unknown, Turkey | 3× SW13 | Mice | [ | |
|
| JC280 | 1964, tick-isolate ( | SMB | Mice | [ |
|
| Tok-Hfla-2013 | 2013, tick-isolate ( | Not passaged, homogenized ticks used | Mice | [ |
|
| IbAr 1792 | 1964, tick-isolate ( | SMB | Mice | [ |
| KT281/75 | 1975, tick-isolate ( | 5× BSC-1 2, 2× SMB | Mice | [ | |
| IbH11480 | 1966, human-isolate, Nigeria | 5× SMB | Mice | [ |
1 Suckling mouse brain (SMB). 2 Cell lines (HepG2, Huh7, Vero E6, SW13, BSC-1).
CCHFV vaccine MCMs evaluated in humans and laboratory animals.
| Vaccine. | Treatment Regimen | Route of Vaccination | Animal Species/Strain | % Protection | Target(s) | Mechanism of Protection | Human Efficacy Data | REF |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MVA-GP | 1 × 107 PFU/dose, 2 doses | IM | IFNAR−/−(A129) | 100 | M-segment glycoproteins | antibody appeared irrelevant | N | [ |
| M-segment DNA vaccine | 25 µg DNA, three doses | IM electroporation | IFNAR−/−(C57BL/6), or C57BL/6 (mAb 5A3 treated upon challenge) | 60–70 | M-segment glycoproteins | neutralizing and total antibody titers do not correlate with protection | N | [ |
| rVSV expressing M-segment ORF | 1 or 2 doses of 107 PFU/dose | IP | STAT-1 | 100 | M-segment glycoproteins | antibody against glycoproteins, and neutralizing antibody titers but mechanism is unclear | N | [ |
| GN/GC and N DNA vaccine and/or VLPs | 50 µg DNA; 1 × 106 VLPs, three doses varying combinations | intradermal electroporation (DNA), IP (VLP) | IFNAR−/−(A129) | 100 | GN, GC and N | unknown | N | [ |
| Bovine Herpesvirus N subunit vaccine | 100 TCID50, two doses | IM | IFNAGR−/− | 100 | N | unknown | N | [ |
| CCHF virus-like replicon particle with M-segment | 1 dose of 105 TCID50 or 103 TCID50 | SC | IFNAR−/− | 103 TCID50 (80%), 105 TCID50 (100%) | M-segment glycoproteins | unknown | N | [ |
| MVA-NP | 1 or 2 doses of 107 PFU/dose | IM | IFNAR−/−(A129) | 0 | N | not protective | N | [ |
| GN ectodomain or GC ectodomain subunit vaccines | 2 doses 7.5 µg GC or 15 µg GN | IP | STAT-1 | 0 + | GN or GC | not protective | N | [ |
| Formalin inactivated cell culture derived CCHFV mixed with alum | 3 doses of 5, 20, or 40 µg | IP | IFNAR−/− | 5 µg dose (60%), 20 and 40 µg (80%) | Whole virus | antibody against glycoproteins, and neutralizing antibody titers but mechanism is unclear | N | [ |
| Adenovirus N subunit vaccine | 1.25 × 107 IFU | IM | IFNAR−/−(C57BL/6) | 33–78 | N | prime/boost more protective | N | [ |
| Mouse brain-derived chloroform and heat inactivated CCHFV strain V42/81 # adsorbed on Al(OH)3 | 1 mL doses (day 0 and 30, 1 y and every 5 y thereafter (given March-April) | SC | humans | Unknown | Whole virus | antibody against glycoproteins and N, and T-cell response to N but mechanism is unclear | Y | [ |
# Human data; + Either subunit
CCHFV therapeutic MCMs evaluated in humans and laboratory animals.
| Class | MCM | Treatment Regimen | Route of Delivery | Animal Species/Strain | Post-Exposure Protection | % Protection | Target(s) | Mechanism of Protection | Human Efficacy Data | REF |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| CCHF-bulin # | 3–9 mL, 1–5 d or longer | IM | humans | Y | >60(human) | antibody targets unidentified | human convalescent plasma | Y | [ |
| CCHF-venin# | 30 mL combined with 30 mL of CCHF-Bulin | IV | humans | Y | 100(human) | antibody targets unidentified | human convalescent plasma | Y | [ | |
| mAb-13G8 | 1 mg/dose, two doses | SC, IP | IFNAR−/−, mAb 5A3 treated C57BL/6 mice | Y | 70–100 | GP38 | may involve complement | N | [ | |
|
| Ribavirin # | 500 mg (oral), 30 mg/kg–7.5 mg/kg IV | oral, SC #, IV #, IP ^ | humans, mice (STAT-1 and IFNAR−/−) | Y | 20–80 Mice Unclear * | Nucleoside-analog | targets viral RNA synthesis | Y * | [ |
| Favipiravir | 300 mg/kg | IP | IFNAR−/−mice | Y | 100 | Nucleoside-analog | targets viral RNA synthesis | N | [ |
# Human data; ^ Route in mice; * Conflicting human efficacy data
Figure 1Lethal Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever virus (CCHFV) infection in mice treated with MAb-5A3 post-challenge. C57BL/6 mice(n = 8/group) were infected with 100 plaque forming units/mL CCHFV strain Afg09-2990 by the intraperitoneal route as described in [104] and at the indicated times post-infection (24 h, 36 h, 48 h or 72 h) were treated with MAb-5A3 (2.5 mg) which disrupts type I interferon signaling. Survival and group weights were monitored for 15 days and plotted using Prism software.
BSL2 and BSL3 nairovirus mouse models.
| Virus | Animal Model | Virus Strain(s) | Virus Dose | Route(s) of Infection | % Lethality | Time to Death [days] | Salient Features | REF |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Neonatal mice | JC280 | 103–104 LD50 | IC | 100 | 2.5–3 d | neuronal destruction, viremia and high titers in liver | [ |
| IFNAR−/− mice (A129) | JC280 | 40000, 1000 and 10 PFU | ID | 70–100 | 4–7 d | liver damage, histopathological changes in spleen and lymph nodes | [ | |
|
| IFNAR−/− mice (A129) | Tok-Hfla-2013 | 10-3–103 FFU | SC | 0, 25 or 100 | 3–6 d | gastrointestinal disorder, 10−3 FFU dose not lethal, 10−2 FFU 25% lethality, higher doses are uniformly lethal | [ |
|
| Neonatal mice | KT281/75 | 0.3-1522 PFU | IN | 100 | 3–6 d | highest titers in brain | [ |
| CD-1 mice + cyclophosphamide | KT281/75 | >4.2 × 104 PFU | SC, IN | 0–80 | < 40 d | respiratory and neurological disease ensues in cyclophosphamide treated mice but only after IN challenge. SC challenge is not lethal | [ | |
| IFNAR−/− mice (A129) | IbAr 1792 | 100-1000 PFU | IC, IP | 100 | 2–5 d | Neurological disease | [ | |
| CD-1 mice | Ib11480 | 2488 PFU | IN | Not specified | Not specified | neurological disease, did not require immunosuppression | [ |