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In vivo cellular and molecular study on duck spleen infected by duck Tembusu virus.

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Duck Tembusu virus (DTMUV) is a novel member of flavivirus with the highest viral loads in the spleen. Six-month egg-laying shelducks were intramuscularly injected with DTMUV strain XZ-2012. Morphological analysis… Click to show full abstract

Duck Tembusu virus (DTMUV) is a novel member of flavivirus with the highest viral loads in the spleen. Six-month egg-laying shelducks were intramuscularly injected with DTMUV strain XZ-2012. Morphological analysis revealed the presence of vacuolar degeneration in the periellipsoidal lymphatic sheaths (PELS) of spleen white pulp following infection, especially from 12 hpi to 3 dpi. Ultrastructural images showed an obvious swelling of cells and their mitochondria and endoplasmic reticulum. Using RNA-seq analysis, the expression levels of RIG-I like receptors (RLRs), downstream IRF7 and proinflammatory cytokines IL-6 from RIG-I signaling pathway were non-apparently upregulated at 2 hpi and apparently at 3 dpi, while MHC-II expression was obviously downregulated at 2 hpi. The expression levels of downstream antiviral cytokines type-I IFNs, anti-inflammatory cytokines IL-10, cell adhesion molecules (CAMs), chemokines and their receptors associated with lymphocyte homing were significantly upregulated at 3 dpi. The population of lymphocyte was increased at 6 dpi. The immune function of spleen was recovered starting from 9 dpi. These findings of this study suggest that DTMUV invaded into the spleen via RIG-I signaling pathway and enhanced immune evasion by inhibiting MHC-II expression during the early stage of infection. Additionally, DTMUV induced PELS lesions through activating IL-6 expression. Furthermore, DTMUV increased the expression levels of RLRs, antiviral type-I IFNs, lymphocyte homing-related genes and proteins as well as the number of lymphocytes in the infected duck spleen. Taken altogether, this study provides new insights into the cellular and molecular mechanisms of DTMUV infection in duck spleen.

Keywords: duck tembusu; tembusu virus; duck spleen; duck; expression; infected duck

Journal Title: Veterinary microbiology
Year Published: 2019

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