Abstract

Antecedent viral infection may contribute to increased susceptibility to several neurological diseases, such as multiple sclerosis and Parkinson’s disease. Variation in clinical presentations of these diseases is often associated with gender, genetic background, or a combination of these and other factors. The complicated etiologies of these virally influenced diseases are difficult to study in conventional laboratory mouse models, which display a very limited number of phenotypes. We have used the genetically and phenotypically diverse Collaborative Cross mouse panel to examine complex neurological phenotypes after viral infection. Female and male mice from 18 CC strains were evaluated using a multifaceted phenotyping pipeline to define their unique disease profiles following infection with Theiler’s Murine Encephalomyelitis Virus, a neurotropic virus. We identified 4 distinct disease progression profiles based on limb-specific paresis and paralysis, tremors and seizures, and other clinical signs, along with separate gait profiles. We found that mice of the same strain had more similar profiles compared to those of different strains, and also identified strains and phenotypic parameters in which sex played a significant role in profile differences. These results demonstrate the value of using CC mice for studying complex disease subtypes influenced by sex and genetic background. Our findings will be useful for developing novel mouse models of virally induced neurological diseases with heterogenous presentation, an important step for designing personalized, precise treatments.

Highlights

  • Antecedent viral infection may contribute to increased susceptibility to several neurological diseases, such as multiple sclerosis and Parkinson’s disease

  • The spectrum of neurological phenotypes that can follow viral infection may range from a life without neurological dysfunction to one of dramatic disability, or death

  • Different Collaborative Cross (CC) strains present with strikingly different phenotypes and disease progression after infection with the same neurotropic virus

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Summary

Introduction

Antecedent viral infection may contribute to increased susceptibility to several neurological diseases, such as multiple sclerosis and Parkinson’s disease. We found that mice of the same strain had more similar profiles compared to those of different strains, and identified strains and phenotypic parameters in which sex played a significant role in profile differences These results demonstrate the value of using CC mice for studying complex disease subtypes influenced by sex and genetic background. Mice have contributed significantly to studies of human neurological diseases, via experiments using conventional inbred or genetically modified mouse strains (such as knock-out/knock-in models). We test the hypothesis that the CC strains could be used to develop precise neurological profiles of TMEV-infected mice – similar to subtypes observed in human neurological diseases

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