A mouse model of paralytic myelitis caused by enterovirus D68

Author summary Reports of polio-like paralysis, referred to as acute flaccid myelitis (AFM), have recently emerged in association with infections caused by enterovirus D68 (EV-D68). In the second half of 2014, 120 cases of AFM, mostly in young children, were reported during a nationwide outbreak of EV-D68 respiratory disease. The number of AFM cases has risen again in 2016. Although epidemiological evidence between EV-D68 infection and AFM is accumulating, a causal link has not been definitely established. Here we demonstrate that strains of EV-D68 recovered during the 2014 epidemic can cause a paralytic illness in mice that resembles human AFM. Evidence that EV-D68 causes paralysis in this mouse model include: (1) loss of spinal cord motor neurons innervating paralyzed limbs, (2) detection of virus in the spinal cord and, specifically, motor neurons, (3) transmission of neurological disease when injecting virus isolated from spinal cords of paralyzed mice into naïve mice, thus fulfilling Koch’s postulates, and (4) the ability to prevent AFM by pre-administering serum containing EV-D68 antibodies from previously infected mice. This experimental mouse model can be used to better understand the pathogenesis of EV-D68-induced CNS disease and to facilitate the development of potential therapies.See it on Scoop.it, via Viruses and Bioinformatics from Virology.uvic.ca
A mouse model of paralytic myelitis caused by enterovirus D68
Source: Viral Bioinformatics

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