AI Article Synopsis

  • Eastern equine encephalitis virus (EEEV) is a highly fatal virus with no current vaccines or treatments, making research on its effects critical for future developments.
  • In a study, female BALB/c mice were infected with EEEV using three different methods—intranasal, aerosol, and subcutaneous—to analyze the virus's impact on brain tissue and pathology.
  • Results indicate that EEEV can enter the brain faster through the olfactory system when mice are infected via aerosol or intranasal routes but takes longer through the subcutaneous method, highlighting different pathways of infection and the need for targeted therapeutic research.

Article Abstract

Background: Eastern equine encephalitis virus (EEEV) is an alphavirus with a case fatality rate estimated to be as high as 75 % in humans and 90 % in horses. Surviving patients often have long-lasting and severe neurological sequelae. At present, there is no licensed vaccine or therapeutic for EEEV infection. This study completes the clinical and pathological analysis of mice infected with a North American strain of EEEV by three different routes: aerosol, intranasal, and subcutaneous. Such an understanding is imperative for use of the mouse model in vaccine and antiviral drug development.

Methods: Twelve-week-old female BALB/c mice were infected with EEEV strain FL93-939 by the intranasal, aerosol, or subcutaneous route. Mice were euthanized 6 hpi through 8 dpi and tissues were harvested for histopathological and immunohistochemical analysis.

Results: Viral antigen was detected in the olfactory bulb as early as 1-2 dpi in aerosol and intranasal infected mice. However, histologic lesions in the brain were evident about 24 hours earlier (3 dpi vs 4 dpi), and were more pronounced following aerosol infection relative to intranasal infection. Following subcutaneous infection, viral antigen was also detected in the olfactory bulb, though not as routinely or as early. Significant histologic lesions were not observed until 6 dpi.

Conclusion: These pathologic studies suggest EEEV enters the brain through the olfactory system when mice are exposed via the intranasal and aerosol routes. In contrast, the histopathologic lesions were delayed in the subcutaneous group and it appears the virus may utilize both the vascular and olfactory routes to enter the brain when mice are exposed to EEEV subcutaneously.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4589026PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12985-015-0385-2DOI Listing

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