1. Chimeric flavivirus causes vascular leakage and bone marrow suppression in a mouse model.
- Author
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Kurosu T, Hanabara K, Asai A, Pambudi S, Phanthanawiboon S, Omokoko MD, Sakai Y, Suzuki T, and Ikuta K
- Subjects
- Mice, Humans, Animals, Bone Marrow pathology, Mice, Knockout, Antibodies, Viral, Flavivirus, Dengue Virus, Dengue
- Abstract
Previously, we demonstrated the utility of a recombinant chimeric flavivirus (DV2ChimV), which carries the premembrane (prM) and envelope (E) genes of a type 2 DENV clinical (Thai) isolate on a backbone of Japanese encephalitis virus, for evaluating the protective efficacy of antidengue envelope antibodies both in vitro and in vivo. Here, to assess the potential use of this model for pathological studies, we aimed to characterize interferon-α/β-γ-receptor double-knockout mice (IFN-α/β/γR dKO mice) infected with DV2ChimV. Vascular leakage and bone marrow suppression are unique features of severe dengue. In the current model, DV2ChimV caused vascular leakage in the liver and intestine at the moribund stage. High levels of virus were detected in the bone marrow, and strong bone marrow suppression (i.e., disappearance of megakaryocytes and erythroblastic islets) was observed. These observations suggest that the DV2ChimV-infected mouse model mimics the vascular leakage and bone marrow suppression observed in human cases., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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