Dokumentdetails
ID

oai:HAL:hal-03969413v1

Thema
chicken duck highly pathogenic avian influenza influenza neuron neurotropism primary [SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio] [SDV.BA.MVSA]Life Sciences [q-bio]...
Autor
Foret-Lucas, Charlotte Figueroa, Thomas Coggon, Amelia Houffschmitt, Alexandre Dupré, Gabriel Fusade-Boyer, Maxime Guérin, Jean-Luc Delverdier, Maxence Bessière, Pierre Volmer, Romain
Langue
en
Editor

HAL CCSD;American Society for Microbiology

Kategorie

Wissenschaften: Lebenswissenschaften

Jahr

2023

Auflistungsdatum

15.12.2023

Schlüsselwörter
lesions contrast inflammatory cause infection duck distress replication neurotropism neurological signs influenza h5n8 virus chickens ducks viral
Metrisch

Zusammenfassung

Segment sequences can be found on GenBank (accession numbers MK859904 to MK859911 and MK859926 to MK859933).

;International audience; ABSTRACT H5N8 high-pathogenicity avian influenza virus (HPAIV) of clade 2.3.4.4B, which circulated during the 2016 epizootics in Europe, was notable for causing different clinical signs in ducks and chickens.

The clinical signs preceding death were predominantly neurological in ducks versus respiratory in chickens.

To investigate the determinants for the predominant neurological signs observed in ducks, we infected duck and chicken primary cortical neurons.

Viral replication was identical in neuronal cultures from both species.

In addition, we did not detect any major difference in the immune and inflammatory responses.

These results suggest that the predominant neurological involvement of H5N8 HPAIV infection in ducks could not be recapitulated in primary neuronal cultures.

In vivo, H5N8 HPAIV replication in ducks peaked soon after infection and led to an early colonization of the central nervous system.

In contrast, viral replication was delayed in chickens but ultimately burst in the lungs of chickens, and the chickens died of respiratory distress before brain damage became significant.

Consequently, the immune and inflammatory responses in the brain were significantly higher in duck brains than those in chickens.

Our study thus suggests that early colonization of the central nervous system associated with prolonged survival after the onset of virus replication is the likely primary cause of the sustained inflammatory response and subsequent neurological disorders observed in H5N8 HPAIV-infected ducks.IMPORTANCE The severity of high-pathogenicity avian influenza virus (HPAIV) infection has been linked to its ability to replicate systemically and cause lesions in a variety of tissues.

However, the symptomatology depends on the host species.

The H5N8 virus of clade 2.3.4.4B had a pronounced neurotropism in ducks, leading to severe neurological disorders.

In contrast, neurological signs were rarely observed in chickens, which suffered mostly from respiratory distress.

Here, we investigated the determinants of H5N8 HPAIV neurotropism.

We provide evidence that the difference in clinical signs was not due to a difference in neurotropism.

Our results rather indicate that chickens died of respiratory distress due to intense viral replication in the lungs before viral replication in the brain could produce significant lesions.

In contrast, ducks better controlled virus replication in the lungs, thus allowing the virus to replicate for a sufficient duration in the brain, to reach high levels, and to cause significant lesions.

Foret-Lucas, Charlotte,Figueroa, Thomas,Coggon, Amelia,Houffschmitt, Alexandre,Dupré, Gabriel,Fusade-Boyer, Maxime,Guérin, Jean-Luc,Delverdier, Maxence,Bessière, Pierre,Volmer, Romain, 2023, In Vitro and In Vivo Characterization of H5N8 High-Pathogenicity Avian Influenza Virus Neurotropism in Ducks and Chickens, HAL CCSD;American Society for Microbiology

Dokumentieren

Öffnen

Teilen

Quelle

Artikel empfohlen von ES/IODE AI

Systematic druggable genome-wide Mendelian randomization identifies therapeutic targets for lung cancer
agphd1 subtypes replication hykk squamous cell gene carcinoma causal targets mendelian randomization cancer analysis