Semen-Derived Exosomes Mediate Immune Escape and Transmission of Reticuloendotheliosis Virus

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Abstract

Reticuloendotheliosis virus (REV) causes immune-suppression disease in poultry, leading to a significant economic burden worldwide. Recent evidence demonstrated that the REV can enter the semen and then induce artificial insemination, but how the virus gets into semen was little known. Accumulating studies indicated that exosomes serve as vehicles for virus transmission, but the role of exosomes in viral shedding through the semen remains unclear. In this study, exosomes purified from the REV-positive semen were shown with reverse transcription-PCR and mass spectrometry to contain viral genomic RNA and viral proteins, which could also establish productive infections both in vivo and in vitro and escape from the REV-specific neutralizing antibodies. More importantly, compared with the infection caused by free virions, the exosome is more efficient for the virus to ensure effective infection and replication, which can also help the REV compromise the efficacy of the host immune response. In summary, this study demonstrated that semen-derived exosomes can medicate the transmission and immune escape of REV, implicating a novel mechanism for REV entering the semen and leading to vertical transmission.

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APA

Su, Q., Zhang, Y., Cui, Z., Chang, S., & Zhao, P. (2021). Semen-Derived Exosomes Mediate Immune Escape and Transmission of Reticuloendotheliosis Virus. Frontiers in Immunology, 12. https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2021.735280

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