4.8 Article

Identification of a Locus in Mice that Regulates the Collateral Damage and Lethality of Virus Infection

Journal

CELL REPORTS
Volume 27, Issue 5, Pages 1387-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2019.04.004

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Funding

  1. NCI Center Core Support Grant [5P30CA016086-41]
  2. NIH [R21AI117575, R56AI110682, R01AI138337, R01AI143894, U42OD010924, T32HL007149, R01HL130404, R01AI029564, U19AI109965]
  3. UNC start-up funds

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Arenaviruses can cause severe hemorrhagic disease in humans, which can progress to organ failure and death. The underlying mechanisms causing lethality and person-to-person variation in outcome remain incompletely explained. Herein, we characterize a mouse model that recapitulates many features of pathogenesis observed in humans with arenavirus-induced hemorrhagic disease, including thrombocytopenia, severe vascular leakage, lung edema, and lethality. The susceptibility of congenic B6.PL mice to lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) infection is associated with increased antiviral T cell responses in B6.PL mice compared with C57BL/6 mice and is T cell dependent. Pathogenesis imparted by the causative locus is inherited in a semi-dominant manner in F1 crosses. The locus includes PL-derived sequence variants in both poorly annotated genes and genes known to contribute to immune responses. This model can be used to further interrogate how limited genetic differences in the host can remarkably alter the disease course of viral infection.

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