📄 Inhibition of NF-κB-mediated inflammation in severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-infected mice increases survival
Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (SARS-CoV) is the etiological agent of a respiratory disease that has a 10% mortality rate. We previously showed that SARS-CoV lacking the E gene (SARS-CoV-ΔE) is attenuated in several animal model systems. Here, we show that absence of the E protein resulted in reduced expression of proinflammatory cytokines, decreased numbers of neutrophils in lung infiltrates, diminished lung pathology, and increased mouse survival, suggesting that lung inflammation contributed to SARS-CoV virulence. Further, infection with SARS-CoV-ΔE resulted in decreased activation of NF-κB compared to levels for the wild-type virus. Most important, treatment with drugs that inhibited NF-κB activation led to a reduction in inflammation and lung pathology in both SARS-CoV-infected cultured cells and mice and significantly increased mouse survival after SARS-CoV infection. These data indicated that activation of the NF-κB signaling pathway represents a major contribution to the inflammation induced after SARS-CoV infection and that NF-κB inhibitors are promising antivirals in infections caused by SARS-CoV and potentially other pathogenic human coronaviruses. © 2014, American Society for Microbiology.
keywords
🔗 syndrome coronavirus (1074)
🔗 etiological agent (62)
🔗 human coronavirus (623)
🔗 respiratory syndrome (2004)
🔗 acute respiratory (1734)
author
👤 DeDiego, Marta L.
👤 Nieto-Torres, Jose L.
👤 Regla-Nava, Jose A.
👤 Jimenez-Guardeño, Jose M.
👤 Fernandez-Delgado, Raul
👤 Fett, Craig
👤 Castaño-Rodriguez, Carlos
👤 Perlman, Stanley
👤 Enjuanes, Luis
year
⏰ 2014
journal
📚 Journal of Virology
issn
🗄 0022538X 10985514
volume
88
number
2
page
913-924
citedbycount
43
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