TitleSPF Rabbits Infected with Rabbit Hepatitis E Virus Isolate Experimentally Showing the Chronicity of Hepatitis
AuthorsHan, Jian
Lei, Yaxin
Liu, Lin
Liu, Peng
Xia, Junke
Zhang, Yulin
Zeng, Hang
Wang, Lin
Wang, Ling
Zhuang, Hui
AffiliationPeking Univ, Hlth Sci Ctr, Dept Microbiol, Sch Basic Med Sci, Beijing 100871, Peoples R China.
KeywordsPHYLOGENETIC ANALYSIS
FAMILY HEPEVIRIDAE
UNITED-STATES
FULL-GENOME
IDENTIFICATION
TRANSMISSION
PATIENT
CHINA
PREVALENCE
GENOTYPES
Issue Date2014
Publisherplos one
CitationPLOS ONE.2014,9,(6).
AbstractThis study focused on investigating the pathogenesis seen in specific-pathogen-free (SPF) rabbits following infection with a homologous rabbit HEV isolate (CHN-BJ-rb14) and comparing it to that seen following infection with a heterologous swine genotype 4 HEV isolate (CHN-XJ-SW13). Three of the four animals inoculated with the homologous rabbit HEV became infected, exhibiting an intermittent viremia, obvious fluctuations of liver function biomarkers alanine aminotransferase (ALT) and aspartate aminotransferase (AST), and persistent fecal virus shedding throughout the nine month study. In addition, liver histopathology showed both chronic inflammation and some degree of fibrosis. Both positive and negative-stranded HEV RNA and HEV antigen expression were detected in liver, brain, stomach, duodenum and kidney from the necropsied rabbits. Inflammation of extrahepatic tissue (duodenum and kidney) was also observed. Three of the four rabbits inoculated with the heterologous genotype 4 swine HEV also became infected, showing similar levels of anti-HEV antibody to that generated following infection with the homologous virus isolate. The duration of both viremia and fecal shedding of virus was however shorter following infection with the heterologous virus and there was no significant elevation of liver function biomarkers. These results suggest that rabbit HEV infection may cause more severe hepatitis and prolong the course of the disease, with a possible chronic trend of hepatitis in SPF rabbits.
URIhttp://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11897/188950
ISSN1932-6203
DOI10.1371/journal.pone.0099861
IndexedSCI(E)
PubMed
Appears in Collections:医学部待认领

Web of Science®



Checked on Last Week

Scopus®



Checked on Current Time

百度学术™



Checked on Current Time

Google Scholar™





License: See PKU IR operational policies.