Abstract

Duck Hepatitis A Virus (DHAV) belongs to the Avihepatovirus, which is also classified into Picornaviridae with Hepatovirus, Hepatitis A Virus (HAV). In humans, the pathogenesis of HAV is not well understood because of limited work with animal models. Here, we investigated the progress of duck viral hepatitis caused by DHAV and their potential for dissecting the pathogenesis of HAV. During the course of infection, the duck model had undergone hepatocellular lesions (vacuolation, acidophilic degeneration and steatosis), lymphocytes recruitment (neutrophil granulocytes, heterophilic granulocytes and T cells or plasm cells) and repair (activation of hepatic stellate cells, fibrosis and regeneration). Coincident with liver injury, the serum biomarkers, aspartate aminotransferase and alanine transaminase were significantly increased. Moreover, comparatively lower CD4+ and CD8+ T-cells were recruited to the liver, which might lead to a persistent infection (40 wk). Because DHAV and HAV have similar genomic structure, biological phenotypes and can easily replicate in liver. And half of fibrosis-related genes had high homology between humans and ducks. Considering these similarity in pathological and virological phenotypes, we proposed that the ducks might be an alternatively small animal model that would provide insight into the pathogenesis of viral hepatitis, fibrosis and liver regeneration.

Highlights

  • Hepatitis A is a worldwide human liver disease caused by Hepatitis A Virus (HAV), especially in areas of lower socio-economic status and reduced sanitary conditions

  • This type of viral hepatitis in ducklings should be classified as acute viral hepatitis, but the progressive pathogenesis caused by Duck Hepatitis A virus (DHAV) in mature ducks has been largely unexplored

  • Liver tissues from infected breeding ducks had developed apparent liver injury with acute hepatitis at early infection and chronic hepatitis at later infection characterized by histopathological changes

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Summary

Introduction

Hepatitis A is a worldwide human liver disease caused by Hepatitis A Virus (HAV), especially in areas of lower socio-economic status and reduced sanitary conditions. DHAV, a member of the Avihepatovirus genus within the same family Picornaviridae, causes a highly fatal, rapidly infectious disease in ducklings, characterized by swelling livers mottled with haemorrhages [3,4,5,6]. This type of viral hepatitis in ducklings should be classified as acute viral hepatitis, but the progressive pathogenesis caused by DHAV in mature ducks has been largely unexplored. Chronic Viral Hepatitis (CVH) is mainly caused by Hepatitis B Virus (HBV), Hepatitis C Virus (HCV), and Hepatitis D Virus (HDV), but humans infected with www.impactjournals.com/oncotarget

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