Poliovirus pathogenesis in a new poliovirus receptor transgenic mouse model: age-dependent paralysis and a mucosal route of infection

S Crotty, L Hix, LJ Sigal… - Journal of general …, 2002 - microbiologyresearch.org
S Crotty, L Hix, LJ Sigal, R Andino
Journal of general virology, 2002microbiologyresearch.org
We constructed a poliovirus receptor (PVR) transgenic mouse line carrying a PVRδ cDNA
driven by a β-actin promoter. We refer to this model as the cPVR mouse. The cPVR mice
express Pvr in a variety of tissues (including small intestines, brain, spinal cord, muscle,
blood and liver) and are susceptible to infection after intraperitoneal, intracerebral or
intramuscular inoculation of poliovirus. After intraperitoneal inoculation, poliovirus
replication is observed in cPVR muscle, brain, spinal cord and, notably, small intestine. The …
We constructed a poliovirus receptor (PVR) transgenic mouse line carrying a PVRδ cDNA driven by a β-actin promoter. We refer to this model as the cPVR mouse. The cPVR mice express Pvr in a variety of tissues (including small intestines, brain, spinal cord, muscle, blood and liver) and are susceptible to infection after intraperitoneal, intracerebral or intramuscular inoculation of poliovirus. After intraperitoneal inoculation, poliovirus replication is observed in cPVR muscle, brain, spinal cord and, notably, small intestine. The cPVR mice exhibit a striking age-dependent paralysis after intramuscular infection, with 2-week-old mice being 10000-fold more susceptible to paralytic disease than adult mice. The cPVR mice are also susceptible to paralysis following intranasal infection with poliovirus. After intranasal infection, virus replication is observed in the olfactory bulb, cerebrum, brain stem and spinal cord, suggesting that intranasal infection of cPVR mice is a model for bulbar paralysis. Intranasally infected mice frequently display unusual neurological behaviours. The PVR transgenic mouse reported here provides the first available model for a mucosal route of infection with poliovirus.
Microbiology Research