Abstract

Newly emerging arthrotropic avian reoviruses (ARVs) are genetically divergent, antigenically heterogeneous, and economically costly. Nevertheless, the mechanism of emerging ARV-induced disease pathogenesis and potential differences in virulence between virus genotypes have not been adequately addressed. In this study, the life cycle of ARV, including the formation of cytoplasmic ARV neo-organelles, paracrystalline structures, and virus release mechanisms, were characterized in the infected host cell by transmission electron microscopy (TEM). In addition, progressive changes in the structure of infected cells were investigated by time-lapse and field emission scanning electron (FE-SE) microscopy. ARVs from the four genotypic cluster groups included in the study caused gross and microscopic lesions in the infected birds. Marked infiltration of γδT cells, CD4+ and CD8+ T lymphocytes were observed in ARV infected tendon tissues starting day 3 post-infection. The ARV variant from genotype cluster-2 triggered significantly high trafficking of IFN-γ producing CD8+ T lymphocytes in tendon tissues and concomitantly showed high morbidity and severe disease manifestations. In contrast, the ARV variant from genotype cluster-4 was less virulent, caused milder disease, and accompanied less infiltration of IFN-γ producing CD8+ T cells. Interestingly, when we blunted antiviral immune responses using clodronate liposomes (which depletes antigen-presenting cells) or cyclosporin (which inhibits cytokine production that regulates T-cell proliferation), significantly lower IFN-γ producing CD8+ T cells infiltrated into tendon tissues, resulting in reduced tendon tissues apoptosis and milder disease manifestations. In summary, these data suggest that the degree of ARV virulence and tenosynovitis/arthritis are potentially directly associated with the ability of the virus to traffic massive infiltration of cytotoxic CD8+ T cells into the infected tissues. Moreover, the ability to traffic cytotoxic CD8+ T cells into infected tendon tissues and the severity of tenosynovitis differ between variants from different ARV genotype cluster groups. However, more than one virus isolate per genotype group needs to be tested to further confirm the association of pathogenicity with genotype. These findings can be used to further examine the interaction of viral and cellular pathways which are essential for the pathogenesis of the disease at the molecular level and to develop effective disease control strategies.

Highlights

  • Virus-induced arthritis/tenosynovitis in broilers is one of the most economically significant diseases of poultry

  • Transmission electron microscopy was performed to characterize the pattern of replication of Avian reovirus (ARV) isolates in infected LMH cells

  • We found that the tendon tissues harvested from birds infected with Reo-V3 underwent a higher degree of apoptosis followed by Reo-V1, Reo-V4, and Reo-V2, respectively (Figure 8B, graph lower panel)

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Summary

Introduction

Virus-induced arthritis/tenosynovitis in broilers is one of the most economically significant diseases of poultry. Depending on the degree of severity, it results in poor growth and production, and sometimes death, causing considerable economic losses. The causative agent was identified as reovirus by electron microscope studies (Walker et al, 1972). The disease was later reproduced experimentally by inoculating healthy birds with reovirus isolates from tendon tissues (Olson and Weiss, 1972). Avian reovirus (ARV) is classified under the Reoviridae family in the genus Orthoreovirus (Benavente and Martínez-Costas, 2007; Day, 2009). The genome segments encode 12 primary translation products with eight structural proteins (i.e., λA, λB, λC, μA, μB, σA, σB, and σC), and four non-structural proteins (i.e., μNS, P10, P17, and σNS), which are expressed only in infected cells (Benavente and Martínez-Costas, 2007)

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