Affiliation:
1. Departments
of Medicine
2. Anatomy and
Neurobiology, Washington University School of Medicine,
St. Louis, Missouri
3. Pathology and
Immunology
4. Molecular
Microbiology
Abstract
ABSTRACT
West
Nile virus (WNV) infects neurons and leads to encephalitis, paralysis,
and death in humans, animals, and birds. We investigated the mechanism
by which neuronal injury occurs after WNV infection. Neurons in the
anterior horn of the spinal cords of paralyzed mice exhibited a high
degree of WNV infection, leukocyte infiltration, and degeneration.
Because it was difficult to distinguish whether neuronal injury was
caused by viral infection or by the immune system response, a novel
tissue culture model for WNV infection was established in neurons
derived from embryonic stem (ES) cells. Undifferentiated ES cells were
relatively resistant to WNV infection. After differentiation, ES cells
expressed neural antigens, acquired a neuronal phenotype, and became
permissive for WNV infection. Within 48 h of exposure to an
exceedingly low multiplicity of infection (5 ×
10
−4
), 50% of ES cell-derived neurons became
infected, producing nearly 10
7
PFU of infectious virus per
ml, and began to die by an apoptotic mechanism. The establishment of a
tractable virus infection model in ES cell-derived neurons facilitates
the study of the molecular basis of neurotropism and the mechanisms of
viral and immune-mediated neuronal injury after infection by WNV or
other neurotropic
pathogens.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Virology,Insect Science,Immunology,Microbiology
Cited by
209 articles.
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