Novel murine model of human astrovirus infection reveals cardiovascular tropism
Macee C. Owen, Yuefang Zhou, Holly Dudley, Taylor Feehley, Ashley Hahn, Christine C. Yokoyama, Margaret L. Axelrod, Chieh-Yu Lin, David Wang, Andrew B. Janowski

TL;DR
A new mouse model shows that a human astrovirus infects heart tissue and causes inflammation, suggesting a link to cardiovascular disease.
Contribution
The study introduces the first in vivo model for human astrovirus infection and reveals a novel cardiovascular tropism.
Findings
VA1 astrovirus infects heart tissue in mice and causes myocarditis-like inflammation.
VA1 can replicate in human cardiac endothelial cells, indicating cardiovascular tropism.
Immune-deficient mice show increased viral RNA in heart and blood, highlighting immune system roles.
Abstract
Astroviruses are a common cause of gastrointestinal disease in humans and have been linked to fatal cases of encephalitis. A major barrier to the study of human-infecting astroviruses is the lack of an in vivo model as previous attempts failed to identify a host that supports viral replication. We describe a novel murine model of infection using astrovirus VA1/HMO-C (VA1), an astrovirus with high seroprevalence in humans. VA1 is cardiotropic, and viral RNA levels peak in the heart tissue 7 days post-inoculation in multiple different murine genetic backgrounds. Infectious VA1 particles could be recovered from heart tissue 3 and 5 days post-inoculation. Viral capsid was detected intracellularly in the heart tissue by immunostaining, and viral RNA was detected in cardiac myocytes, endocardium, and endothelial cells based on fluorescent in situ hybridization and confocal microscopy.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsViral gastroenteritis research and epidemiology · Viral Infections and Immunology Research · Virus-based gene therapy research
