4.7 Article

A double deletion prevents replication of the pestivirus bovine viral diarrhea virus in the placenta of pregnant heifers

Journal

PLOS PATHOGENS
Volume 17, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1010107

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Funding

  1. Boehringer-Ingelheim Vetmedica GmbH [FLI Ri-562 BI]

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Double deletion mutants of BVDV are unable to establish persistent infection in pregnant heifers due to a defect in transferring the virus from the mother to the fetus. This is supported by the absence of mutant virus in placenta and fetal tissues, as well as the specific inhibition of mutant virus replication in the placenta. Additionally, gene expression analysis reveals a stronger upregulation of innate immune response genes in cell lines infected with the mutant virus compared to the wild type, resulting in reduced virus replication in epithelial cells at the maternal-fetal interface.
In contrast to wild type bovine viral diarhea virus (BVDV) specific double deletion mutants are not able to establish persistent infection upon infection of a pregnant heifer. Our data shows that this finding results from a defect in transfer of the virus from the mother animal to the fetus. Pregnant heifers were inoculated with such a double deletion mutant or the parental wild type virus and slaughtered pairwise on days 6, 9, 10 and 13 post infection. Viral RNA was detected via qRT-PCR and RNAscope analyses in maternal tissues for both viruses from day 6 p.i. on. However, the double deletion mutant was not detected in placenta and was only found in samples from animals infected with the wild type virus. Similarly, high levels of wild type viral RNA were present in fetal tissues whereas the genome of the double deletion mutant was not detected supporting the hypothesis of a specific inhibition of mutant virus replication in the placenta. We compared the induction of gene expression upon infection of placenta derived cell lines with wild type and mutant virus via gene array analysis. Genes important for the innate immune response were strongly upregulated by the mutant virus compared to the wild type in caruncle epithelial cells that establish the cell layer on the maternal side at the maternal-fetal interface in the placenta. Also, trophoblasts which can be found on the fetal side of the interface showed significant induction of gene expression upon infection with the mutant virus although with lower complexity. Growth curves recorded in both cell lines revealed a general reduction of virus replication in caruncular epithelial cells compared to the trophoblasts. Compared to the wild type virus this effect was dramtic for the mutant virus that reached only a TCID50 of 1.0 at 72 hours post infection.

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