Literature detail

Experimental pathology of two highly pathogenic H5N1 viruses isolated from crows in BALB/c mice.

Subbiah Kombiah1 Manoj Kumar2 Harshad Vinayakrao Murugkar3 Shanmugasundaram Nagarajan3 Chakradhar Tosh3 Dhanapal Senthil Kumar3 Katherukamem Rajukumar3 Siddharth Gautam1 Rajendra Singh1 Mathesh Karikalan1 Anil Kumar Sharma1 Vijendra Pal Singh3
Affiliations 3 institutions
  1. ICAR- Indian Veterinary and Research Institute, Izatnagar, Uttar Pradesh, India.
  2. ICAR- National Institute of High Security Animal Diseases, Bhopal, Madhya Pradesh, India. Electronic address: [email protected].
  3. ICAR- National Institute of High Security Animal Diseases, Bhopal, Madhya Pradesh, India.
PMID 31972269 2020 Microb Pathog eng ppublish
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Article

Publication summary

In this study, we assessed the pathogenicity of two H5N1 viruses isolated from crows in mice. Eighteen 6-8 weeks BALB/c mice each were intranasally inoculated with 10<sup>6</sup> EID<sub>50</sub>/ml of H5N1 viruses A/crow/India/03CA04/2015 (H9N2-PB2 reassortant H5N1) and A/crow/India/02CA01/2012 (Non-reassortant H5N1). The infected mice showed dullness, weight loss and ruffled fur coat. Histopathological examination of lungs showed severe congestion, haemorrhage, thrombus, fibrinous exudate in perivascular area, interstitial septal thickening, bronchiolitis and alveolitis leading to severe pneumonic changes and these lesions were less pronounced in reassortant virus infected mice. Viral replication was demonstrated in nasal mucosa, lungs, trachea and brain in both the groups. Brain, lung, nasal mucosa and trachea showed significantly higher viral RNA copies and presence of antigen in immunohistochemistry in both the groups. This study concludes that both the crow viruses caused morbidity and mortality in mice and the viruses were phenotypically highly virulent in mice. The H5N1 viruses isolated from synanthropes pose a serious public health concern and should be monitored continuously for their human spill-over.

Avian influenza BALB/c mice Crow isolates H9N2-PB2 reassortant H5N1 Animals Biopsy Crows Disease Susceptibility Histocytochemistry Influenza A Virus, H5N1 Subtype Influenza in Birds Mice Mice, Inbred BALB C Orthomyxoviridae Infections Reassortant Viruses RNA, Viral Viral Load Virus Replication

Structured evidence records

Evidence records

3 total
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.90
Key finding

H5N1 viruses isolated from crows were capable of infecting and causing disease in BALB/c mice, demonstrating animal-to-animal cross-species transmission.

Virus
Location
Supporting text

In this study, we assessed the pathogenicity of two H5N1 viruses isolated from crows in mice. Eighteen 6-8 weeks BALB/c mice each were intranasally inoculated with 10^6 EID50/ml of H5N1 viruses A/crow/India/03CA04/2015 and A/crow/India/02CA01/2012. This study concludes that both the crow viruses caused morbidity and mortality in mice.

Method
experimental infection; histopathological examination; virus isolation; immunohistochemistry; viral RNA quantification
Study design
animal experiment
Transmission direction
animal-to-animal
Geographic raw
India
Country inferred
India
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.98
Key finding

Experimental infection of BALB/c mice with two H5N1 viruses isolated from crows showed replication in respiratory and neural tissues and severe pathology, indicating high virulence and host susceptibility.

Virus
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

Eighteen 6–8 weeks BALB/c mice each were intranasally inoculated with 10^6 EID50/ml of H5N1 viruses A/crow/India/03CA04/2015 (H9N2-PB2 reassortant H5N1) and A/crow/India/02CA01/2012 (Non-reassortant H5N1). The infected mice showed dullness, weight loss and ruffled fur coat... Viral replication was demonstrated in nasal mucosa, lungs, trachea and brain in both the groups.

Method
experimental infection; intranasal inoculation; histopathology; immunohistochemistry; viral replication assay
Sample type
nasal mucosa; lungs; trachea; brain
Experimental system
in vivo animal experiment
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.95
Key finding

The H9N2-PB2 reassortant H5N1 virus isolated from crows exhibited pathogenicity in mice, indicating that reassortment between H9N2 and H5N1 segments is associated with high virulence and possible spillover risk.

Host
Not specified
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

Eighteen 6-8 weeks BALB/c mice each were intranasally inoculated with 10^6 EID50/ml of H5N1 viruses A/crow/India/03CA04/2015 (H9N2-PB2 reassortant H5N1) and A/crow/India/02CA01/2012 (Non-reassortant H5N1).

Event type
reassortment
Genes or segments
PB2