Academic Thesis

Basic information

Name Kojima Isshu
Belonging department
Occupation name
researchmap researcher code R000055330
researchmap agency Okayama University of Science

Title

Differential role of NSs genes in the neurovirulence of two genogroups of Akabane virus causing postnatal encephalomyelitis.

Bibliography Type

Author

Misuzu Okajima/Akiko Takenaka-Uema/Yuji Fujii/Fumiki Izumi/Isshu Kojima/Makoto Ozawa/Kiyotada Naitou/Yuto Suda/Shoko Nishiyama/Shin Murakami/Taisuke Horimoto/Naoto Ito/Hiroaki Shirafuji/Tohru Yanase/Tatsunori Masatani

Summary

Akabane virus (AKAV) is a member of the genus Orthobunyavirus, family Peribunyaviridae. In addition to AKAV strains that cause fetal Akabane disease, which is characterized by abortion in ruminants, some AKAV strains cause postnatal infection characterized by nonsuppurative encephalomyelitis in ruminants. Here, we focused on the NSs protein, a virulence factor for most viruses belonging to the genus Orthobunyavirus, and we hypothesized that this protein would act as a neurovirulence factor in AKAV strains causing postnatal encephalomyelitis. We generated AKAV strains that were unable to produce the NSs protein, derived from two different genogroups, genogroups I and II, and then examined the role of their NSs proteins by inoculating mice intracerebrally with these modified viruses. Our results revealed that the neurovirulence of genogroup II strains is dependent on the NSs protein, whereas that of genogroup I strains is independent of this protein. Notably, infection of primary cultured bovine cells with these viruses suggested that the NSs proteins of both genogroups suppress innate immune-related gene expression with equal efficiency. These results indicate differences in the determinants of virulence of orthobunyaviruses.

Magazine(name)

Archives of virology

Publisher

Volume

169

Number Of Pages

1

StartingPage

7

EndingPage

7

Date of Issue

2023/12

Referee

Exist

Invited

Language

English

Thesis Type

Research papers (academic journals)

ISSN

DOI

10.1007/s00705-023-05929-w

NAID

PMID

J-GLOBAL ID

arXiv ID

ORCID Put Code

DBLP ID