Affiliation:
1. Departments of Immunology
2. Medicine
3. Neurology
4. Pediatrics
5. Microbiology
6. Program in Neurosciences, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The mechanisms by which viruses kill susceptible cells in target organs and ultimately produce disease in the infected host remain poorly understood. Dependent upon the site of inoculation and strain of virus, experimental infection of neonatal mice with reoviruses can induce fatal encephalitis or myocarditis. Reovirus-induced apoptosis is a major mechanism of tissue injury, leading to disease development in both the brain and heart. In cultured cells, differences in the capacity of reovirus strains to induce apoptosis are determined by the S1 gene segment, which also plays a major role as a determinant of viral pathogenesis in both the heart and the central nervous system (CNS) in vivo. The S1 gene is bicistronic, encoding both the viral attachment protein sigma-1 and the nonstructural protein sigma-1-small (σ1s). Although σ1s is dispensable for viral replication in vitro, we wished to investigate the expression of σ1s in the infected heart and brain and its potential role in reovirus pathogenesis in vivo. Two-day-old mice were inoculated intramuscularly or intracerebrally with either σ1s
−
or σ1s
+
reovirus strains. While viral replication in target organs did not differ between σ1s
−
and σ1s
+
viral strains, virus-induced caspase-3 activation and resultant histological tissue injury in both the heart and brain were significantly reduced in σ1s
−
reovirus-infected animals. These results demonstrate that σ1s is a determinant of the magnitude and extent of reovirus-induced apoptosis in both the heart and CNS and thereby contributes to reovirus pathogenesis and virulence.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Virology,Insect Science,Immunology,Microbiology
Cited by
29 articles.
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