Abstract

BackgroundIn the developing brain, self-renewing neural stem/progenitor cells (NSPC) give rise to neuronal and glial lineages. NSPC survival and differentiation can be altered by neurotropic viruses and by the anti-viral immune response. Several neurotropic viruses specifically target and infect NSPCs, in addition to inducing neuronal loss, which makes it difficult to distinguish between effects on NSPCs that are due to direct viral infection or due to the anti-viral immune response.MethodsWe have investigated the impact of anti-viral immunity on NSPCs in measles virus (MV)-infected neonates. A neuron-restricted viral infection model was used, where NSPCs remain uninfected. Thus, an anti-viral immune response was induced without the confounding issue of NSPC infection. Two-transgenic mouse lines were used: CD46+ mice express the human isoform of CD46, the MV entry receptor, under the control of the neuron-specific enolase promoter; CD46+/IFNγ-KO mice lack the key anti-viral cytokine IFNγ. Multi-color flow cytometry and Western Blot analysis were used to quantify effects on NSPC, neuronal, and glial cell number, and quantify effects on IFNγ-mediated signaling and cell markers, respectively.ResultsFlow cytometric analysis revealed that NSPCs were reduced in CD46+/IFNγ-KO mice at 3, 7, and 10 days post-infection (dpi), but were unaffected in CD46+ mice. Early neurons showed the greatest cell loss at 7 dpi in both genotypes, with no effect on mature neurons and glial cells. Thus, IFNγ protected against NSPC loss, but did not protect young neurons. Western Blot analyses on hippocampal explants showed reduced nestin expression in the absence of IFNγ, and reduced doublecortin and βIII-tubulin in both genotypes. Phosphorylation of STAT1 and STAT2 occurred independently of IFNγ in the hippocampus, albeit with distinct regulation of activation.ConclusionsThis is the first study to demonstrate bystander effects of anti-viral immunity on NSPC function. Our results show IFNγ protects the NSPC population during a neonatal viral CNS infection. Significant loss of NSPCs in CD46+/IFNγ-KO neonates suggests that the adaptive immune response is detrimental to NSPCs in the absence of IFNγ. These results reveal the importance and contribution of the anti-viral immune response to neuropathology and may be relevant to other neuroinflammatory conditions.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12974-016-0571-1) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • In the developing brain, self-renewing neural stem/progenitor cells (NSPC) give rise to neuronal and glial lineages

  • IFNγ protects neural stem/progenitor cells (NSPCs), but not early neurons, during viral infection of the neonatal brain We first confirmed that measles virus (MV) infection is limited to Central nervous system (CNS) neurons in CD46+ neonates

  • We investigated whether a lack of IFNγ might impact the proportion of NSPCs or cells specified to the neuronal lineage during the course of infection

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Summary

Introduction

Self-renewing neural stem/progenitor cells (NSPC) give rise to neuronal and glial lineages. NSPC survival and differentiation can be altered by neurotropic viruses and by the anti-viral immune response. Several neurotropic viruses target and infect NSPCs, in addition to inducing neuronal loss, which makes it difficult to distinguish between effects on NSPCs that are due to direct viral infection or due to the anti-viral immune response. In the developing CNS, self-renewing neural stem precursor cells (NSPC) provide a pool of progenitor cells that can mature into functional neurons or glia [13]. Many studies that measured NSPC survival and differentiation during viral infections have done so with viruses that infect and replicate in NSPCs [16,17,18] This makes it experimentally difficult to distinguish between which component contributes to neuropathology: primary viral infection or bystander inflammation

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