West Nile 25A virus infection of B-cell-deficient (μMT) mice: characterization of neuroinvasiveness and pseudoreversion of the viral envelope protein

Author:

Chambers Thomas J.1,Droll Deborah A.1,Walton Andrew H.1,Schwartz Julie1,Wold William S. M.1,Nickells Janice1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Molecular Microbiology and Immunology, Saint Louis University School of Medicine, 1402 South Grand Ave, St Louis, MO 63104, USA

Abstract

The attenuated West Nile virus 25A strain (WN25A) was investigated for its neuroinvasive properties in B-cell-deficient (μMT) mice. After peripheral inoculation, WN25A caused fatal encephalitis in the majority of 6–8-week-old mice, characterized by a systemic infection with viraemia, moderate virus burdens in peripheral tissues and a high titre of brain-associated virus. Mice generally succumbed to infection within a few weeks of infection. However, others survived for as long as 10 weeks, and some for even longer. Normal age-matched C57BL/6 mice showed no signs of illness after inoculation with WN25A virus. Nucleotide sequencing of WN25A viruses recovered from the brains of B-cell-deficient mice revealed that the conserved N-linked glycosylation site in the viral envelope protein was abolished by substitution of a serine residue at position 155. This was found to be a pseudoreversion relative to the wild-type WN-Israel strain, based on virulence testing of one such brain-associated virus in both B-cell-deficient and normal C57BL/6 mice. This study provides further characterization of the mouse virulence properties of the attenuated WN25A virus in the context of B-cell deficiency. Replication in these mice does not involve rapid neuroadaptation or reversion of WN25A virus to a neuroinvasive phenotype. Molecular modelling studies suggest a difference in local structure of the E protein associated with either an asparagine or serine residue at position 155 compared with the tyrosine found in the virulent parental WN-Israel virus.

Publisher

Microbiology Society

Subject

Virology

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