
Efficient control of Japanese encephalitis virus in the central nervous system of infected pigs occurs in the absence of a pronounced inflammatory immune response
- Author
- Valerie Redant, Herman Favoreel (UGent) , Kai Dallmeier, Willem Van Campe and Nick De Regge
- Organization
- Abstract
- Background Japanese encephalitis virus (JEV) is the leading cause of viral encephalitis in Asia. JEV infection of mice and humans can lead to an uncontrolled inflammatory response in the central nervous system (CNS), resulting in a detrimental outcome. Pigs act as important amplification and reservoir hosts, and JEV infection of pigs is mostly subclinical. Information on virus spread in the CNS and immune responses controlling JEV infection in the CNS of pigs, however remains scarce. Methods Nine-week-old pigs were inoculated intranasal or intradermal with a relevant dose of 10(5) TCID50 of JEV genotype 3 Nakayama strain. Clinical signs were assessed daily, and viral spread was followed by RT-qPCR. mRNA expression profiles were determined to study immune responses in the CNS. Results Besides a delay of 2 days to reach the peak viremia upon intranasal compared to intradermal inoculation, the overall virus spread via both inoculation routes was highly similar. JEV appearance in lymphoid and visceral organs was in line with a blood-borne JEV dissemination. JEV showed a particular tropism to the CNS but without the induction of neurological signs. JEV entry in the CNS probably occurred via different hematogenous and neuronal pathways, but replication in the brain was mostly efficiently suppressed and associated with a type I IFN-independent activation of OAS1 expression. In the olfactory bulb and thalamus, where JEV replication was not completely controlled by this mechanism, a short but strong induction of chemokine gene expression was detected. An increased IFNy expression was simultaneously observed, probably originating from infiltrating T cells, correlating with a fast suppression of JEV replication. The chemokine response was however not associated with the induction of a strong inflammatory response, nor was an induction of the NLRP3 inflammasome observed. Conclusions These findings indicate that an adequate antiviral response and an attenuated inflammatory response contribute to a favorable outcome of JEV infection in pigs and help to explain the limited neurological disease compared to other hosts. We show that the NLRP3 inflammasome, a key mediator of neurologic disease in mice, is not upregulated in pigs, further supporting its important role in JEV infections.
- Keywords
- Immunology, General Neuroscience, Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience, Neurology, Japanese encephalitis virus, Pig, Virus dissemination, Immune response, WEST-NILE-VIRUS, NEURONAL DEATH, CELLS, INOCULATION, ACTIVATION, CHEMOKINES, MICROGLIA, DISEASE, HUMANS, CORTEX
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Please use this url to cite or link to this publication: http://hdl.handle.net/1854/LU-8702037
- MLA
- Redant, Valerie, et al. “Efficient Control of Japanese Encephalitis Virus in the Central Nervous System of Infected Pigs Occurs in the Absence of a Pronounced Inflammatory Immune Response.” JOURNAL OF NEUROINFLAMMATION, vol. 17, no. 1, 2020, doi:10.1186/s12974-020-01974-3.
- APA
- Redant, V., Favoreel, H., Dallmeier, K., Van Campe, W., & De Regge, N. (2020). Efficient control of Japanese encephalitis virus in the central nervous system of infected pigs occurs in the absence of a pronounced inflammatory immune response. JOURNAL OF NEUROINFLAMMATION, 17(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12974-020-01974-3
- Chicago author-date
- Redant, Valerie, Herman Favoreel, Kai Dallmeier, Willem Van Campe, and Nick De Regge. 2020. “Efficient Control of Japanese Encephalitis Virus in the Central Nervous System of Infected Pigs Occurs in the Absence of a Pronounced Inflammatory Immune Response.” JOURNAL OF NEUROINFLAMMATION 17 (1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12974-020-01974-3.
- Chicago author-date (all authors)
- Redant, Valerie, Herman Favoreel, Kai Dallmeier, Willem Van Campe, and Nick De Regge. 2020. “Efficient Control of Japanese Encephalitis Virus in the Central Nervous System of Infected Pigs Occurs in the Absence of a Pronounced Inflammatory Immune Response.” JOURNAL OF NEUROINFLAMMATION 17 (1). doi:10.1186/s12974-020-01974-3.
- Vancouver
- 1.Redant V, Favoreel H, Dallmeier K, Van Campe W, De Regge N. Efficient control of Japanese encephalitis virus in the central nervous system of infected pigs occurs in the absence of a pronounced inflammatory immune response. JOURNAL OF NEUROINFLAMMATION. 2020;17(1).
- IEEE
- [1]V. Redant, H. Favoreel, K. Dallmeier, W. Van Campe, and N. De Regge, “Efficient control of Japanese encephalitis virus in the central nervous system of infected pigs occurs in the absence of a pronounced inflammatory immune response,” JOURNAL OF NEUROINFLAMMATION, vol. 17, no. 1, 2020.
@article{8702037, abstract = {{Background Japanese encephalitis virus (JEV) is the leading cause of viral encephalitis in Asia. JEV infection of mice and humans can lead to an uncontrolled inflammatory response in the central nervous system (CNS), resulting in a detrimental outcome. Pigs act as important amplification and reservoir hosts, and JEV infection of pigs is mostly subclinical. Information on virus spread in the CNS and immune responses controlling JEV infection in the CNS of pigs, however remains scarce. Methods Nine-week-old pigs were inoculated intranasal or intradermal with a relevant dose of 10(5) TCID50 of JEV genotype 3 Nakayama strain. Clinical signs were assessed daily, and viral spread was followed by RT-qPCR. mRNA expression profiles were determined to study immune responses in the CNS. Results Besides a delay of 2 days to reach the peak viremia upon intranasal compared to intradermal inoculation, the overall virus spread via both inoculation routes was highly similar. JEV appearance in lymphoid and visceral organs was in line with a blood-borne JEV dissemination. JEV showed a particular tropism to the CNS but without the induction of neurological signs. JEV entry in the CNS probably occurred via different hematogenous and neuronal pathways, but replication in the brain was mostly efficiently suppressed and associated with a type I IFN-independent activation of OAS1 expression. In the olfactory bulb and thalamus, where JEV replication was not completely controlled by this mechanism, a short but strong induction of chemokine gene expression was detected. An increased IFNy expression was simultaneously observed, probably originating from infiltrating T cells, correlating with a fast suppression of JEV replication. The chemokine response was however not associated with the induction of a strong inflammatory response, nor was an induction of the NLRP3 inflammasome observed. Conclusions These findings indicate that an adequate antiviral response and an attenuated inflammatory response contribute to a favorable outcome of JEV infection in pigs and help to explain the limited neurological disease compared to other hosts. We show that the NLRP3 inflammasome, a key mediator of neurologic disease in mice, is not upregulated in pigs, further supporting its important role in JEV infections.}}, articleno = {{315}}, author = {{Redant, Valerie and Favoreel, Herman and Dallmeier, Kai and Van Campe, Willem and De Regge, Nick}}, issn = {{1742-2094}}, journal = {{JOURNAL OF NEUROINFLAMMATION}}, keywords = {{Immunology,General Neuroscience,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Neurology,Japanese encephalitis virus,Pig,Virus dissemination,Immune response,WEST-NILE-VIRUS,NEURONAL DEATH,CELLS,INOCULATION,ACTIVATION,CHEMOKINES,MICROGLIA,DISEASE,HUMANS,CORTEX}}, language = {{eng}}, number = {{1}}, pages = {{17}}, title = {{Efficient control of Japanese encephalitis virus in the central nervous system of infected pigs occurs in the absence of a pronounced inflammatory immune response}}, url = {{http://doi.org/10.1186/s12974-020-01974-3}}, volume = {{17}}, year = {{2020}}, }
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