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“MMR” Measles, Mumps, Rubella Leslie Lobel Dept. of Virology Pathology Building Room 255 E-mail: [email protected] Office: 08-6282851 Mobile: 052-6488000 1 “Childhood” diseases: Measles, mumps, and rubella What do they have in common? Infection via respiratory tract Systemic illness, which begins only after two cycles of viremia No natural hosts other than man known Infection provides (more or less) life-long immunity (Early childhood infection is often milder than adolescent or adult infection) 2 Measles and Mumps are Paramyxoviridae (RNA-) HN F rNP M 3 Structure of Paramyxoviruses 4 RESPIRATORY SYNCTIAL VIRUS F&G Serotypes A & B 5 Respiratory syncytial virus in cell culture 6 Comparison of Ortho- and Para Similarities General structure, lipid membrane ssRNA (-) Two proteins extending from the membrane For now, it seems that all viruses in these families that infect humans do so in the respiratory tract Differences Segmented genome vs. continuous Paramyxoviridae are somewhat larger Genetic stability Mode of entry into the host cell Location of genome replication 7 Paramyxoviruses Parainfluenza 1. bronchitis and croup 2. usually relatively milder disease, but… 3. bronchitis and pneumonia 4. mainly upper respiratory infection (URI) Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV) • milder illness • bronchiolitis • Pneumonia Metapneumovirus 8 Individual viruses and their illnesses: (1) Measles Relatively short incubation period about 1.5-2 weeks, 10-14 days There is practically NO subclinical infection Even simple infection (without complications) is incapacitating for a week to 10 days About 95% of exposed susceptible persons will become infected 9 High fever starts about 2-3 days before appearance of maculopapular rash (centrifugal spread), and continues, gradually abating Cough, coryza, conjunctivitis, photophobia Malaise, anorexia Recovery after simple infection, one week to 10 days 10 Diagnosis Koplik’s spots, tiny white dots on an inflamed buccal mucosa: appear 2-3 days after start of fever, disappearing after first day or two of rash. The general rash is not pathognomonic—a heavy rubella rash may be difficult to distinguish from a light measles rash. Serologic diagnosis may be made from shortly after appearance of the rash: IgM at first, then rising titer of IgG. Usually carried out by ELISA. At one time HI was the most common assay method. 11 Koplik’s spots in measles Note: Koplik’s spots may appear as tiny dots or as ulcerations “Enanthem” Exanthem 12 Measles exanthem 13 Measles: desquamation and conjunctivitis 14 15 Complications of measles Secondary bacterial infections: otitis media, eye infections, and more General depression of cellular immunity: e.g., herpes simplex reactivation Respiratory tract: several types of pneumonia (bacterial or viral, measles, giant-cell) Central nervous system: encephalitis, SSPE (subacute sclerosing panencephalitis) (Atypical measles) 16 CNS complications in measles (affinity for central nervous system) SSPE SSPE symptoms and prognosis SSPE diagnosis (serology: high titers; EEG: slow waves) SSPE epidemiology (massive exposure, young age) Effect of measles vaccine on incidence of SSPE 17 Measles virus outbreaks The need for a second immunization Possible subclinical infection in partially immune persons What is the earliest age at which one can immunize? 18 Individual viruses and their illnesses: (2) Mumps 19 Mumps 20 Mumps Incubation period relatively long (2.5 wks) Virus replicates rather slowly… Rather mild illness (usually low fever, swelling of parotid glands) One third of infections are asymptomatic Contagiousness: Virus is secreted in saliva 6 days before appearance of symptoms There is an effective vaccine—developed because of complications of mumps infection 21 Complications of mumps infection Nervous system Meningitis – usually benign Meningoencephalitis – can be dangerous Deafness Pancreatitis — diabetes (IDDM, type I)? Orchitis and oophoritis—sterility, rarely Myocarditis 22 Rubella (German measles, 3-day measles) Rubella is a Togavirus (RNA+) Mature rubella virion in cytoplasmic vacuole. Note central capsid and lipid-containing outer envelope; bar = 100 nm 23 24 Togaviridae: Enveloped + Strand RNA Viruses Alphaviruses – a) Eastern Equine Encephalitis b) Western Equine Encephalitis c) Venezuelan Equine Encephalitis Rubiviruses – a) Rubella 25 26 Rubella infections The virus is extremely labile Incubation period relatively long (~2.5 weeks) Generally mild illness: sometimes low fever, maculopapular rash, lymphadenopathy, specifically posterior cervical and suboccipital l.n., conjunctivitis, and sore throat One quarter of infections are subclinical Arthralgia is common in infections of adolescents and adults (virus in joints) Vaccine developed because of teratogenicity 27 Rubella exanthem 28 Simple rubella Congenital rubella 29 Rubella congenital infection cataracts 30 These defects are fairly common. Others are possible but are rather rare. Some defects are noticed only with time (developmental) 31 Spread of rubella in the host 32 Excretion of rubella in urine after congenital infection 33 Mechanism of damage to fetus Inflammation of blood vessels of the placenta—lack of O2 for fetus? Chromosome breaks?? Slowing of cell division (in vitro, infected human embryo cells respond less to epidermal growth factor and synthesize less collagen) Focal cellular necrosis (lens) Damage to blood vessels (and nearby neural tissue) Immune complexes? Timetable of fetal damage 1st 8 weeks of pregnancy: 67-85% chance for fetal damage Average for 1st trimester, 30% 2nd trimester on: about 10% chance for damage—mostly auditory 34 Molecular mechanisms of cellular and fetal damage Viral p90 (replicase) Binds cellular RB (retinoblastoma) protein (cf. IE2 86 of CMV) causes premature cellular DNA synthesis, yielding chromosomal damage and mitotic arrest) Binds cellular citron-k kinase (CK), a cytokinesis regulatory protein Deletion of the RB binding motif is lethal to the virus Problem of cellular location (RB vs virus) CK knockout: pcd (programmed cell death) of neuroblasts, malformation syndromes of the CNS; apoptosis? Will new drugs be developed to prevent these interactions? 35 Diagnosis of congenital rubella Prenatal—exposure/illness Postnatal Viral culture from urine Infant IgM or IgA Importance of diagnosis -for genetic counseling -for protection of pregnant women 36 37 Simple rubella infection 38 Eradication of these viruses? Lack of animal reservoir Existence of effective vaccine Inapparent infections? High rate of asymptomatic infections in mumps and rubella Asymptomatic infection in partially immune individuals (measles)? Need very high vaccine coverage rate 39 Newly recognized problem If one can’t control measles infection in HIV-infected individuals, it will not be able to be eliminated. There is a lack of good animal models with which to study the response to measles virus infection or immunization in immunocompromised hosts 40 Parvovirus B19 Leslie Lobel [email protected] 052-6488000 41 Classification of human parvoviruses Subfamily Parvovirinae Genus Parvovirus Genus Erythrovirus Adeno-associated viruses types 1-6) (animal viruses) Genus Bocavirus B19 virus (animal viruses) Genus Dependovirus (many animal viruses) Human Bocavirus Bovine and canine bocavirus Subfamily Densovirinae (animal viruses) 42 Computer model of Parvovirus B19 Icosahedral, 32 (60) capsomeres Diameter: 18-26 nm Very small ! One major and one minor coat protein (most parvo have 3) ssDNA About 5 kbp in length 43 Autonomous and defective parvoviruses Parvovirus B19 is an autonomous parvovirus that infects humans Autonomous parvoviruses require growing cells for replication Many other autonomous parvoviruses infect animals AAV (adeno-associated virus) is a dependovirus that infects man, but is not known to be pathogenic It requires a helper virus in order to replicate Many other dependoviruses infect animals 44 Virions of parvovirus B19 and adenoassociated virus (AAV) Non-structural proteins are coded at the 5’ end of the genome. Coat proteins coded for by overlapping in-frame DNA sequences, at 3’ end of genome. Virions are stable to pH (3-9) and to heating at 56 oC for one hour. (significance for blood products) B19 cannot stimulate or turn on host DNA synthesis in resting cells; it waits for the cell to enter S phase. AAV relies on a helper virus (adenovirus or a herpes virus) to induce S phase. 45 The parvovirus genome (True for AAV) 46 Parvovirus Genome ITR Rep Cap 5 kb ssDNA, inverted terminal repeats (ITR) Rep gene required for DNA replication Cap gene encodes capsid proteins ITR Replication of parvoviruses Details may be different for different parvoviruses, and little work has been done on B19 itself 48 Viral proteins VP2 attaches to P antigen receptor, (globoside P antigen), but the virus uses a co-receptor as well Progenitor red cells, megakaryoblasts, endothelial cells, kidney and heart VP1 antibodies are neutralizing NS1 (replication initiator) is cytotoxic (causes apoptosis) NS2 regulates replication 49 Parvovirus B19 entry into host cells The viral receptor is the blood group P antigen (globoside), and this receptor mediates attachment to the target cell. However, alpha5beta1 integrin is a co-receptor; functional activation of beta1 integrin is required for viral entry. Therefore, erythroid progenitor cells are permissive for replication, and non-erythroid cells that may express the P antigen are not permissive. Cells can be induced to permissivity by induction of highaffinity conformation of alpha5beta1 integrins. 50 Disease mechanisms of B19 parvovirus 51 Cell death associated with parvovirus infection Associated with NS1 expression 52 Parvovirus pathogenesis From Medical Microbiology, 5th ed., Murray, Rosenthal & Pfaller, Mosby Inc., 2005, Fig. 56-3. Clinical expressions of parvovirus infection in man (B19) Erythema infectiosum (EI) (Fifth disease) In children: light flu-like symptoms one week after infection; at ~17 days, “slapped cheek syndrome” and general lace-like rash. Rash disappears after 2-3 days. In adults: arthritis, arthralgia, with or without the rash; may persist for weeks, months or years. Transient aplastic crisis (TAC) In host with underlying hemolysis (e.g.: sickle cell disease), resulting in severe acute anemia 54 Clinical expressions of parvovirus infection in man (B19) (2) Pure red cell aplasia In immunocompromised patients Chronic anemia and bone marrow suppression Patients are then dependent on blood transfusions Hydrops fetalis In the fetus of a mother having primary infection with B19. Fetal death due to severe anemia and congestive heart failure, usually before the 20th week of pregnancy. Thought to occur in <10% of primary maternal infections 55 Clinical expressions of parvovirus infection in man (B19) (3) Miscellaneous Fulminant hepatitis Meningitis Encephalitis Vasculitis Myocarditis and cardiac allograft rejection Glomerulopathies in renal transplant recipients Others, see later on 56 Treatment and prevention Vaccines are available for dog and cat parvovirus infections Not for humans, yet. Recombinant capsid proteins with MF59C.1 being tested in clinical trials. Neutralizing antibodies are induced. Immune globulin has been used to treat pure red cell aplasia (PRCA) Its usefulness in other persistent infections is not proven (and often there are complications) When used to treat hydrops fetalis, the newborn may have congenital red cell aplasia, which is an aregenerative chronic anemia. 57 Laboratory diagnosis Viral DNA detection Most sensitive Dot-blot hybridization of serum or tissue extracts In-situ hybridization of fixed tissue PCR Serologic assays Use recombinant parvovirus antigens IgM is indicative of recent infection and lasts 2-3 months IgG lasts for years, but not always in immunocompromised patients 58 Epidemiology - summary Infection transmitted via the respiratory tract Common in childhood Much subclinical Patients with aplastic crisis are likely to be infectious during the course of their illness. Patients with fifth disease are probably not infectious by the time their rash appears. Standard infection control practices should be followed to prevent B19 transmission to health care workers Blood and blood products 59 “Slapped cheek syndrome” 60 Pathogenesis of diseases resulting from parvovirus B19 infection in children and adults Transient aplastic crisis In immunocompromised Pure red cell aplasia 61 Pathogenesis of fetal infections with parvovirus B19 62 Data re: fetal death Jordan and Butchko, 2002. Apoptotic activity in villous trophoblast cells (epithelial cells) during B19 infection correlates with clinical outcome Placental trophoblast cells contain globoside, but are not permissive to B19 replication. A MAb detecting caspase 3 activity (apoptosis) reacted more with trophoblast cells from poor outcome B19 infection than benign infection 63 Data re: inflammatory sequelae Mitchell, 2002, J. Med. Virol. Parvovirus B19 nonstructural protein (NS1) acts as a transactivator of IL-6 synthesis. IL-6 is a proinflammatory cytokine promoter. 64 Other putative pathologic associations of B19 infection (not in textbooks) Acute onset lymphoblastic and myeloblastic leukemia Chronic fatigue syndrome (in association with increased levels of INFgamma and TNF alpha) Improvement with IVIG and better cytokine balance Autoimmune disease affecting joints, connective tissue, and large and small vessels Systemic lupus erythematosus? Neurological manifestations? (demyelination, HLA-DR alleles, and cytokines) 65 Adeno-associated virus (AAV) In vitro, in the absence of a helper virus, AAV can establish a latent infection in a cell culture that involves integration of the viral genome into a unique site on human chromosome 19. Superinfection of a cell carrying such a provirus (by HSV or an adenovirus) rescues the integrated genome and initiates a fully productive infection. 66 The AAV genome TR = terminal repeat All AAV transcripts are co-terminal at the polyadenylation signal (poly A) 67 Rescue of AAV by adenovirus 1 2 3 4 68 Adeno-associated virus (AAV) Most AAV were found in stocks of adenovirus AAV do not stimulate inflammation in the host They do not elicit antibodies against themselves They can enter non-dividing cells These characteristics make them good candidates for gene therapy vectors 69 Some problems and possible solutions When injecting into an animal, most of the material is concentrated by the liver for discard But one can alter one of the coat proteins of AAV to induce it to preferentially bind certain types of cells in the body AAV has a small genome – not much room But one can transfect (or inject) 2 or more AAV vectors 70 Trying gene therapy (not all with AAV) Factor VIII for hemophelia Adenosine deaminase for SCID Erythropoietin for anemia Insulin and promoter active in liver cells and turned on by glucose, for diabetes Etc. 71 THANK YOU 72