Abstract

Saint Louis encephalitis virus caused an outbreak of febrile illness and encephalitis cases in Córdoba, Argentina, in 2005. During this outbreak, the strain CbaAr-4005 was isolated from Culex quinquefasciatus mosquitoes. We hypothesised that this epidemic variant would be more virulent in a mouse model than two other non-epidemic strains (78V-6507 and CorAn-9275) isolated under different epidemiological conditions. To test this hypothesis, we performed a biological characterisation in a murine model, including mortality, morbidity and infection percentages and lethal infection indices using the three strains. Mice were separated into age groups (7, 10 and 21-day-old mice) and analysed after infection. The strain CbaAr-4005 was the most infective and lethal of the three variants, whereas the other two strains exhibited a decreasing mortality percentage with increasing animal age. The strain CbaAr-4005 produced the highest morbidity percentages and no significant differences among age groups were observed. The epidemic strain caused signs of illness in all inoculated animals and showed narrower ranges from the onset of symptoms than the other strains. CbaAr-4005 was the most virulent for Swiss albino mice. Our results highlight the importance of performing biological characterisations of arbovirus strains likely to be responsible for emerging or reemerging human diseases.

Highlights

  • Saint Louis encephalitis virus caused an outbreak of febrile illness and encephalitis cases in Córdoba, Argentina, in 2005

  • Signs of morbidity and animal mortality were assayed after the inoculation of seven, 10 and 21-day-old mice with the Saint Louis encephalitis virus (SLEV) strains CbaAr4005, 78V-6507 and CorAn-9275

  • It is known that virus survival and ability to cause disease in mammalian hosts depend on the virus ability to avoid recognition and escape from the host immune response (Diamond 2009, Ye et al 2012)

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Summary

Introduction

Saint Louis encephalitis virus caused an outbreak of febrile illness and encephalitis cases in Córdoba, Argentina, in 2005. We hypothesised that in a mouse model the SLEV epidemic variant CbaAr-4005 is more virulent than two non-epidemic strains, 78V-6507 and CorAn-9275, isolated under different epidemiological conditions. We performed biological characterisations of the epidemic strain CbaAr-4005 and non-epidemic strains CorAn-9275 and 78V-6507, using Swiss albino mice.

Results
Conclusion
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