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Experimental Morogoro Virus Infection in Its Natural Host, . | LitMetric

Natural hosts of most arenaviruses are rodents. The human-pathogenic Lassa virus and several non-pathogenic arenaviruses such as Morogoro virus (MORV) share the same host species, namely (). In this study, we investigated the history of infection and virus transmission within the natural host population. To this end, we infected at different ages with MORV and measured the health status of the animals, virus load in blood and organs, the development of virus-specific antibodies, and the ability of the infected individuals to transmit the virus. To explore the impact of the lack of evolutionary virus-host adaptation, experiments were also conducted with Mobala virus (MOBV), which does not share as a natural host. Animals infected with MORV up to two weeks after birth developed persistent infection, seroconverted and were able to transmit the virus horizontally. Animals older than two weeks at the time of infection rapidly cleared the virus. In contrast, MOBV-infected neonates neither developed persistent infection nor were able to transmit the virus. In conclusion, we demonstrate that MORV is able to develop persistent infection in its natural host, but only after inoculation shortly after birth. A related arenavirus that is not evolutionarily adapted to is not able to establish persistent infection. Persistently infected animals appear to be important to maintain virus transmission within the host population.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8151005PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/v13050851DOI Listing

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