๐ Co-infection of respiratory bacterium with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus induces an exacerbated pneumonia in mice
SARS-CoV grows in a variety of tissues that express its receptor, although the mechanism for high replication in the lungs and severe respiratory illness is not well understood. We recently showed that elastase enhances SARS-CoV infection in cultured cells, which suggests that SARS development may be due to elastase-mediated, enhanced SARS-CoV infection in the lungs. To explore this possibility, we examined whether co-infection of mice with SARS-CoV and Pp, a low-pathogenic bacterium which elicits elastase production in the lungs, induces exacerbation of pneumonia. Mice co-infected with SARS-CoV and Pp developed severe respiratory disease with extensive weight loss, resulting in a 33โผ90% mortality rate. Mice with exacerbated pneumonia showed enhanced virus infection in the lungs and histopathological lesions similar to those found in human SARS cases. Intranasal administration of LPS, another elastase inducer, showed an effect similar to that of Pp infection. Thus, this study shows that exacerbated pneumonia in mice results from co-infection with SARS-CoV and a respiratory bacterium that induces elastase production in the lungs, suggesting a possible role for elastase in the exacerbation of pneumonia. ยฉ 2008 The Societies and Blackwell Publishing Asia Pty Ltd.
keywords
๐ weight loss (41)
author
๐ค Ami, Yasushi
๐ค Nagata, Noriyo
๐ค Shirato, Kazuya
๐ค Watanabe, Rie
๐ค Iwata, Naoko
๐ค Nakagaki, Keiko
๐ค Fukushi, Shuetsu
๐ค Saijo, Masayuki
๐ค Morikawa, Shigeru
๐ค Taguchi, Fumihiro
year
โฐ 2008
journal
๐ Microbiology and Immunology
issn
๐ 03855600 13480421
volume
52
number
2
page
118-127
citedbycount
12
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