Therapeutic mitigation of measles-like immune amnesia and exacerbated disease after prior respiratory virus infections in ferrets

Author:

Cox Robert M.ORCID,Wolf Josef D.ORCID,Lieberman Nicole A.ORCID,Lieber Carolin M.,Kang Hae-Ji,Sticher Zachary M.ORCID,Yoon Jeong-JoongORCID,Andrews Meghan K.ORCID,Govindarajan Mugunthan,Krueger Rebecca E.ORCID,Sobolik Elizabeth B.ORCID,Natchus Michael G.,Gewirtz Andrew T.,deSwart Rik L.ORCID,Kolykhalov Alexander A.,Hekmatyar Khan,Sakamoto Kaori,Greninger Alexander L.ORCID,Plemper Richard K.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractMeasles cases have surged pre-COVID-19 and the pandemic has aggravated the problem. Most measles-associated morbidity and mortality arises from destruction of pre-existing immune memory by measles virus (MeV), a paramyxovirus of the morbillivirus genus. Therapeutic measles vaccination lacks efficacy, but little is known about preserving immune memory through antivirals and the effect of respiratory disease history on measles severity. We use a canine distemper virus (CDV)-ferret model as surrogate for measles and employ an orally efficacious paramyxovirus polymerase inhibitor to address these questions. A receptor tropism-intact recombinant CDV with low lethality reveals an 8-day advantage of antiviral treatment versus therapeutic vaccination in maintaining immune memory. Infection of female ferrets with influenza A virus (IAV) A/CA/07/2009 (H1N1) or respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) four weeks pre-CDV causes fatal hemorrhagic pneumonia with lung onslaught by commensal bacteria. RNAseq identifies CDV-induced overexpression of trefoil factor (TFF) peptides in the respiratory tract, which is absent in animals pre-infected with IAV. Severe outcomes of consecutive IAV/CDV infections are mitigated by oral antivirals even when initiated late. These findings validate the morbillivirus immune amnesia hypothesis, define measles treatment paradigms, and identify priming of the TFF axis through prior respiratory infections as risk factor for exacerbated morbillivirus disease.

Funder

U.S. Department of Health & Human Services | NIH | National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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