Virus Infections on Prion Diseased Mice Exacerbate Inflammatory Microglial Response.
Nara LinsLuiz MourãoNonata TréviaAline PassosJosé Augusto FariasJarila AssunçãoAmanda QuintairosJoão Bento-TorresMarcia Consentino Kronka SosthenesJosé Antonio Picanço DinizPedro Fernando da Costa VasconcelosCristovam Wanderley Picanço DinizPublished in: Oxidative medicine and cellular longevity (2016)
We investigated possible interaction between an arbovirus infection and the ME7 induced mice prion disease. C57BL/6, females, 6-week-old, were submitted to a bilateral intrahippocampal injection of ME7 prion strain (ME7) or normal brain homogenate (NBH). After injections, animals were organized into two groups: NBH (n = 26) and ME7 (n = 29). At 15th week after injections (wpi), animals were challenged intranasally with a suspension of Piry arbovirus 0.001% or with NBH. Behavioral changes in ME7 animals appeared in burrowing activity at 14 wpi. Hyperactivity on open field test, errors on rod bridge, and time reduction in inverted screen were detected at 15th, 19th, and 20th wpi respectively. Burrowing was more sensitive to earlier hippocampus dysfunction. However, Piry-infection did not significantly affect the already ongoing burrowing decline in the ME7-treated mice. After behavioral tests, brains were processed for IBA1, protease-resistant form of PrP, and Piry virus antigens. Although virus infection in isolation did not change the number of microglia in CA1, virus infection in prion diseased mice (at 17th wpi) induced changes in number and morphology of microglia in a laminar-dependent way. We suggest that virus infection exacerbates microglial inflammatory response to a greater degree in prion-infected mice, and this is not necessarily correlated with hippocampal-dependent behavioral deficits.
Keyphrases
- high fat diet induced
- inflammatory response
- oxidative stress
- neuropathic pain
- emergency department
- randomized controlled trial
- minimally invasive
- type diabetes
- insulin resistance
- adipose tissue
- immune response
- zika virus
- lps induced
- high resolution
- dendritic cells
- endothelial cells
- single cell
- blood brain barrier
- drug induced
- subarachnoid hemorrhage