A new mouse model reveals a critical role for host innate immunity in resistance to Rift Valley fever.
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Authors
do Valle, Tânia ZaveruchaBillecocq, Agnès
Guillemot, Laurent
Alberts, Rudi
Gommet, Céline
Geffers, Robert
Calabrese, Kátia
Schughart, Klaus
Bouloy, Michèle
Montagutelli, Xavier
Panthier, Jean-Jacques
Issue Date
2010-11-15
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Rift Valley fever (RVF) is an arthropod-borne viral disease repeatedly reported in many African countries and, more recently, in Saudi Arabia and Yemen. RVF virus (RVFV) primarily infects domesticated ruminants, resulting in miscarriage in pregnant females and death for newborns and young animals. It also has the ability to infect humans, causing a feverish syndrome, meningoencephalitis, or hemorrhagic fever. The various outcomes of RVFV infection in animals and humans argue for the existence of host genetic determinants controlling the disease. We investigated the susceptibility of inbred mouse strains to infection with the virulent RVFV ZH548 strain. Compared with classical BALB/cByJ mice, wild-derived Mus m. musculus MBT/Pas mice exhibited earlier and greater viremia and died sooner, a result in sharp contrast with their resistance to infection with West Nile virus and influenza A. Infection of mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs) from MBT/Pas mice with RVFV also resulted in higher viral production. Microarray and quantitative RT-PCR experiments showed that BALB/cByJ MEFs displayed a significant activation of the type I IFN pathway. In contrast, MBT/Pas MEFs elicited a delayed and partial type I IFN response to RVFV infection. RNA interference-mediated inhibition of genes that were not induced by RVFV in MBT/Pas MEFs increased viral production in BALB/cByJ MEFs, thus demonstrating their functional importance in limiting viral replication. We conclude that the failure of MBT/Pas murine strain to induce, in due course, a complete innate immune response is instrumental in the selective susceptibility to RVF.Citation
A new mouse model reveals a critical role for host innate immunity in resistance to Rift Valley fever. 2010, 185 (10):6146-56 J. Immunol.Affiliation
Unité Génétique Fonctionnelle de la Souris, Institut Pasteur, Paris, France.PubMed ID
20937849Type
ArticleLanguage
enISSN
1550-6606ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.4049/jimmunol.1000949
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