AI Article Synopsis

  • Marburg virus (MARV) is highly virulent in primates, causing severe disease through immune suppression and inflammation, while causing little harm to its reservoir host, the Egyptian rousette bat (ERB).
  • Research using ERBs infected with a bat strain of MARV reveals that they activate antiviral genes but do not significantly induce proinflammatory genes, contrasting with immune responses seen in primates.
  • These findings provide evidence that the ERB's immune tolerance allows it to host MARV asymptomatically and offer insights into how different hosts respond to pathogens, which could inform future antiviral therapies.

Article Abstract

Marburg virus (MARV) is among the most virulent pathogens of primates, including humans. Contributors to severe MARV disease include immune response suppression and inflammatory gene dysregulation ("cytokine storm"), leading to systemic damage and often death. Conversely, MARV causes little to no clinical disease in its reservoir host, the Egyptian rousette bat (ERB). Previous genomic and in vitro data suggest that a tolerant ERB immune response may underlie MARV avirulence, but no significant examination of this response in vivo yet exists. Here, using colony-bred ERBs inoculated with a bat isolate of MARV, we use species-specific antibodies and an immune gene probe array (NanoString) to temporally characterize the transcriptional host response at sites of MARV replication relevant to primate pathogenesis and immunity, including CD14 monocytes/macrophages, critical immune response mediators, primary MARV targets, and skin at the inoculation site, where highest viral loads and initial engagement of antiviral defenses are expected. Our analysis shows that ERBs upregulate canonical antiviral genes typical of mammalian systems, such as ISG15, IFIT1, and OAS3, yet demonstrate a remarkable lack of significant induction of proinflammatory genes classically implicated in primate filoviral pathogenesis, including CCL8, FAS, and IL6. Together, these findings offer the first in vivo functional evidence for disease tolerance as an immunological mechanism by which the bat reservoir asymptomatically hosts MARV. More broadly, these data highlight factors determining disparate outcomes between reservoir and spillover hosts and defensive strategies likely utilized by bat hosts of other emerging pathogens, knowledge that may guide development of effective antiviral therapies.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2020.10.015DOI Listing

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