| Literature DB >> 36146741 |
Kimberley Bruce1, Jiawei Ma1, Clara Lawler1, Wanxiaojie Xie1, Philip G Stevenson1, Helen E Farrell1.
Abstract
Animal models that mimic human infections provide insights in virus-host interplay; knowledge that in vitro approaches cannot readily predict, nor easily reproduce. Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) infections are acquired asymptomatically, and primary infections are difficult to capture. The gap in our knowledge of the early events of HCMV colonization and spread limits rational design of HCMV antivirals and vaccines. Studies of natural infection with mouse cytomegalovirus (MCMV) have demonstrated the olfactory epithelium as the site of natural colonization. Systemic spread from the olfactory epithelium is facilitated by infected dendritic cells (DC); tracking dissemination uncovered previously unappreciated DC trafficking pathways. The olfactory epithelium also provides a unique niche that supports efficient MCMV superinfection and virus recombination. In this review, we summarize recent advances to our understanding of MCMV infection and spread and the tissue-specific mechanisms utilized by MCMV to modulate DC trafficking. As these mechanisms are likely conserved with HCMV, they may inform new approaches for preventing HCMV infections in humans.Entities:
Keywords: animal model; dendritic cells; herpesvirus spread; mouse cytomegalovirus; olfactory epithelium; viral G protein-coupled receptor
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Year: 2022 PMID: 36146741 PMCID: PMC9505653 DOI: 10.3390/v14091934
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Viruses ISSN: 1999-4915 Impact factor: 5.818
Figure 1The olfactory epithelium is a site of MCMV entry. (A) Alert mice inoculated with <5 uL of inoculum to the nares. The olfactory epithelium (blue) lines the nasal turbinate protruding into the nasal cavity. Axons of olfactory neurons link to the olfactory bulb (red) which is positioned anterior to the brain. Nose infection detected by live imaging 3 days post-infection with a luciferase-tagged MCMV (left) compared with an uninfected control mouse (right); dissection of the palate reveals localized luciferase expression in infected animals. The light intensity scale (p/s/cm2/sr) is shown. (B) Simplified schematic of olfactory infection. Olfactory neurons, whose dendrites contact the environment above the mucous layer are the first targets for MCMV. Infection passes to sustentacular cells and dendritic cells (DC). Infected DC mobilize to the submucosa. (C) Immunohistochemical detection of infected of OMP+ olfactory neurons (upper panel, arrow) 24 h following infection with an EGFP-tagged MCMV; infection of an adjacent CD11c+ cell detected day 3 p.i. (lower panel left; arrow); by day 4 p.i. numerous infected cells presumed to be DC based on further staining (arrowed) were detected in the sub-mucosa (lower panel, right).
Figure 2MCMV modulates dendritic cell (DC) directional decision-making in draining lymph nodes (LN). (A). Schematic showing MCMV-infected DC entry to LN draining the olfactory or lung mucosa via afferent lymphatics. (1) MCMV+ DC traffic via afferent lymphatics, facilitated by CD44. (2) CD11c-cre mice infected with a MCMV mutant possessing a floxed EGFP upstream of a nuclear-localized td-Tomato exhibit color-switched CD11c+ cells infiltrating the LN via ER-TR7+ fibroblastic reticular cells. (3) MCMV+ CD11c+ DCs of mice infected with EGFP-tagged MCMV associate with PNAd+ high endothelial venules (HEV), then extravasate (4) to enter the HEV lumen via a mechanism resistant to fingolimod treatment (FTY720). (5) Infected DC escape to the blood. (6) (B). Immunohistochemical analyses of LN draining the olfactory or lung mucosa taken days 1–3 p.i. showing MCMV+ DC interaction with PNAd+ HEV with reference to schematic pathway indicated numerically in (A). Arrow denotes punctate CD11c+ expression by MCMV-infected DC.
Figure 3The MCMV encoded chemokine receptor M33 drives DC-dependent systemic spread via tissue-specific signaling mechanisms. Schematic showing the fate of M33+ and M33− MCMV infections in vivo. (A) Mucosal infections at the olfactory or lung mucosa with either M33+ (green) or M33− MCMV (red) spread via the afferent lymphatics to draining LN, facilitated by CD44 (B). DC infected with M33+ MCMV traffic to HEV and escape to the blood (C) via a mechanism resistant to pertussis toxin (PTX). In contrast, DC infected with M33− MCMV show reduced association with HEV and viraemia and instead accumulate in LN. Blood-borne MCMV M33+ DC extravasate from the blood to the salivary glands via a PTX-sensitive mechanism, where genome amplification in acinar epithelial cells (green) precedes virus exit (D).
Figure 4Schematic and corresponding immuno-histochemistry of cells infected in the salivary gland during acute (day 5) and persistent (day 12) MCMV infection. Mice infected intranasally with EGFP-tagged MCMV exhibit infected cells at day 5 p.i. and display characteristic punctate CD11c expression. Infected cells lie interposed between E-cadherin+ salivary gland acinar cells. By day 12 p.i. wild type MCMV infection is found predominantly in CD11c-/E-cadherin+ acinar cells. Infected cells indicated by arrows.