The immunomodulating v and W proteins of Nipah virus determine disease course

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Abstract

The viral determinants that contribute to Nipah virus (NiV)-mediated disease are poorly understood compared with other paramyxoviruses. Here we use recombinant NiVs (rNiVs) to examine the contributions of the NiV V and W proteins to NiV pathogenesis in a ferret model. We show that a V-deficient rNiV is susceptible to the innate immune response in vitro and behaves as a replicating non-lethal virus in vivo. Remarkably, rNiV lacking W expression results in a delayed and altered disease course with decreased respiratory disease and increased terminal neurological disease associated with altered in vitro inflammatory cytokine production. This study confirms the V protein as the major determinant of pathogenesis, also being the first in vivo study to show that the W protein modulates the inflammatory host immune response in a manner that determines the disease course.

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Satterfield, B. A., Cross, R. W., Fenton, K. A., Agans, K. N., Basler, C. F., Geisbert, T. W., & Mire, C. E. (2015). The immunomodulating v and W proteins of Nipah virus determine disease course. Nature Communications, 6. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms8483

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