Neurotropism of Saffold virus in a mouse model

Cécile Lardinois, Frédéric Sorgeloos, Sophie Jacobs, Frank J M van Kuppeveld, Bernd Kaspers, Thomas Michiels

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

    Abstract

    Saffold virus (SAFV) is a highly seroprevalent human Cardiovirus discovered recently. No clear association between SAFV infection and human disease has been established. Rare infection cases, however, correlated with neurological symptoms. To gain insight into the pathogenesis potential of the virus, we performed experimental mouse infection with SAFV strains of genotypes 2 and 3 (SAFV-2 and SAFV-3). After intraperitoneal infection, both strains exhibited a typical Cardiovirus tropism. Viral load was most prominent in the pancreas. Heart, spleen, brain and spinal cord were also infected. In interferon receptor deficient (IFNAR-KO) mice, SAFV-3 caused a severe encephalitis. The virus was detected by immunohistochemistry in many parts of the brain and spinal cord, both in neurons and astrocytes but astrocyte infection was more extensive. In vitro, SAFV-3 also infected astrocytes better than neurons in mixed primary cultures. Astrocytes were, however, very efficiently protected by IFN-α/β treatment.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)1350-1355
    JournalJournal of General Virology
    Volume97
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2016

    Keywords

    • Cardiovirus
    • Saffold virus
    • Theilovirus
    • interferon response
    • neurotropism

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