학술논문

Respiratory Tract Explant Infection Dynamics of Influenza A Virus in California Sea Lions, Northern Elephant Seals, and Rhesus Macaques
Document Type
article
Source
Journal of Virology. 95(16)
Subject
Microbiology
Medical Microbiology
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Biological Sciences
Lung
Infectious Diseases
Influenza
Prevention
Biodefense
Emerging Infectious Diseases
Vaccine Related
Pneumonia & Influenza
2.2 Factors relating to the physical environment
Aetiology
Infection
Animals
Dogs
Host Specificity
Influenza A virus
Kinetics
Macaca mulatta
Madin Darby Canine Kidney Cells
Models
Biological
Orthomyxoviridae Infections
Respiratory System
Respiratory Tract Infections
Sea Lions
Seals
Earless
Species Specificity
Viral Load
Viral Tropism
explant
infection dynamics
influenza A virus
kinetics
marine mammal
respiratory viruses
rhesus macaque
tropism
Agricultural and Veterinary Sciences
Medical and Health Sciences
Virology
Agricultural
veterinary and food sciences
Biological sciences
Biomedical and clinical sciences
Language
Abstract
To understand susceptibility of wild California sea lions and Northern elephant seals to influenza A virus (IAV), we developed an ex vivo respiratory explant model and used it to compare infection kinetics for multiple IAV subtypes. We first established the approach using explants from colonized rhesus macaques, a model for human IAV. Trachea, bronchi, and lungs from 11 California sea lions, 2 Northern elephant seals, and 10 rhesus macaques were inoculated within 24 h postmortem with 6 strains representing 4 IAV subtypes. Explants from the 3 species showed similar IAV infection kinetics, with peak viral titers 48 to 72 h post-inoculation that increased by 2 to 4 log10 PFU/explant relative to the inoculum. Immunohistochemistry localized IAV infection to apical epithelial cells. These results demonstrate that respiratory tissue explants from wild marine mammals support IAV infection. In the absence of the ability to perform experimental infections of marine mammals, this ex vivo culture of respiratory tissues mirrors the in vivo environment and serves as a tool to study IAV susceptibility, host range, and tissue tropism. IMPORTANCE Although influenza A virus can infect marine mammals, a dearth of marine mammal cell lines and ethical and logistical challenges prohibiting experimental infections of living marine mammals mean that little is known about IAV infection kinetics in these species. We circumvented these limitations by adapting a respiratory tract explant model first to establish the approach with rhesus macaques and then for use with explants from wild marine mammals euthanized for nonrespiratory medical conditions. We observed that multiple strains representing 4 IAV subtypes infected trachea, bronchi, and lungs of macaques and marine mammals with variable peak titers and kinetics. This ex vivo model can define infection dynamics for IAV in marine mammals. Further, use of explants from animals euthanized for other reasons reduces use of animals in research.