Abstract

Mosquito-borne yellow fever virus (YFV) causes highly lethal, viscerotropic disease in humans and non-human primates. Despite the availability of efficacious live-attenuated vaccine strains, 17D-204 and 17DD, derived by serial passage of pathogenic YFV strain Asibi, YFV continues to pose a significant threat to human health. Neither the disease caused by wild-type YFV, nor the molecular determinants of vaccine attenuation and immunogenicity, have been well characterized, in large part due to the lack of a small animal model for viscerotropic YFV infection. Here, we describe a small animal model for wild-type YFV that manifests clinical disease representative of that seen in primates without adaptation of the virus to the host, which was required for the current hamster YF model. Investigation of the role of type I interferon (IFN-α/β) in protection of mice from viscerotropic YFV infection revealed that mice deficient in the IFN-α/β receptor (A129) or the STAT1 signaling molecule (STAT129) were highly susceptible to infection and disease, succumbing within 6–7 days. Importantly, these animals developed viscerotropic disease reminiscent of human YF, instead of the encephalitic signs typically observed in mice. Rapid viremic dissemination and extensive replication in visceral organs, spleen and liver, was associated with severe pathologies in these tissues and dramatically elevated MCP-1 and IL-6 levels, suggestive of a cytokine storm. In striking contrast, infection of A129 and STAT129 mice with the 17D-204 vaccine virus was subclinical, similar to immunization in humans. Although, like wild-type YFV, 17D-204 virus amplified within regional lymph nodes and seeded a serum viremia in A129 mice, infection of visceral organs was rarely established and rapidly cleared, possibly by type II IFN-dependent mechanisms. The ability to establish systemic infection and cause viscerotropic disease in A129 mice correlated with infectivity for A129-derived, but not WT129-derived, macrophages and dendritic cells in vitro, suggesting a role for these cells in YFV pathogenesis. We conclude that the ability of wild-type YFV to evade and/or disable components of the IFN-α/β response may be primate-specific such that infection of mice with a functional IFN-α/β antiviral response is attenuated. Consequently, subcutaneous YFV infection of A129 mice represents a biologically relevant model for studying viscerotropic infection and disease development following wild-type virus inoculation, as well as mechanisms of 17D-204 vaccine attenuation, without a requirement for adaptation of the virus.

Highlights

  • Yellow fever virus (YFV) is the prototypic member of the genus Flavivirus, family Flaviviridae; a group of arthropod-borne, positivesense RNA viruses which holds dengue (DENV), West Nile and Japanese encephalitis viruses [1]

  • yellow fever virus (YFV) is endemic to tropical Central and South America and sub-Saharan Africa where the virus is mosquito-vectored between non-human primate (NHP) reservoir hosts

  • The highly lethal viral hemorrhagic fever caused by the mosquito-borne yellow fever virus (YFV) affects hundreds of thousands of people annually, despite the availability of the live-attenuated 17D vaccine, developed in the 1930s by serial passage of wild-type strain Asibi

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Summary

Introduction

Yellow fever virus (YFV) is the prototypic member of the genus Flavivirus, family Flaviviridae; a group of arthropod-borne, positivesense RNA viruses which holds dengue (DENV), West Nile and Japanese encephalitis viruses [1]. YFV is endemic to tropical Central and South America and sub-Saharan Africa where the virus is mosquito-vectored between non-human primate (NHP) reservoir hosts. Suspension of mosquito abatement programs, decreasing vaccination coverage and recent problems with vaccine safety and availability [3] have combined to make YFV an emerging threat within the endemic zone and beyond, in the southern United States, East Africa and previously unaffected regions of South and Central America. YF is a pansystemic viral sepsis with 20–50% lethality, distinguishable from other viral hemorrhagic fevers (VHF) by the appearance of hepatitis and jaundice [4]. Hepatic-induced disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) produces severe hemorrhagic manifestations. Late central nervous system (CNS) manifestations, with confusion, seizure and coma, combined with multiple organ failure, presage

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