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ANIMAL CORONAVIRUSES: LESSONS FOR SARS Linda J. Saif TGEV Saif © BCoV Food Animal Health Research Program, Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center, Department of Veterinary Preventive Medicine, The Ohio State University, Wooster, Ohio 44691, USA Saif © Coronavirus Genetic Groups, Target Tissues and Diseases Genetic Group I Virus Host Disease/ Infection Site Respiratory Enteric Other HCoV-229E TGEV PRCoV PEDV FIPV FCoV CCoV HCoV-OC43 MHV RCoV HEV BCoV** human pig pig pig cat cat dog human mouse rat pig cattle X (x) X III IBV TCoV chicken turkey X X X Kidney, Oviduct IV ?? SARS human X X? Kidney? II X X X X X X X X ?? X X Systemic CNS, Systemic Eye, GU CNS SARS Transmission Droplets - close contacts • Households • Hospitals (Health cares workers) • “Superspreaders” Airborne ? Fecal/oral ? Fomites ? Masked Palm Civets Animal host: • Civet Cat - Reports from Hong Kong suggest masked palm civet cat may be an animal host for SARS (Guan et al, Science Express, Sept 4, 2003) Susceptible animal models: • Cynomolgus macaque- (Fouchier et al, Nature 2003. 423:240) • Pigs- Canadian report negative, but 5-6 week-old pigs used and TGEV/PRCV serostatus undefined • Avian species- USDA reported no transmission to SPF chickens, turkeys, ducks or quail Porcine Coronaviruses Group I PRCV Saif © TGEV Saif © Enteric Infections TGEV : Transmissible Gastroenteritis Virus (1965) Infect all age groups but highest mortality in baby pigs PEDV : Porcine Epidemic Diarrhea Virus (1978, Europe; 1980’s, Asia) EpidemicHigh mortality in baby pigs Endemic - Older pigs (>3 months) infected Respiratory Infections PRCV : Porcine Respiratory Coronavirus (1986, Europe; 1989, USA) S gene deletion mutant of TGEV (621 – 682 bp near the N-terminus) Infect all age groups - 1- 3-month-old, most disease There are 2 models for respiratory and enteric coronaviruses in animals PRCV is a S gene deletion mutant of TGEV (same serotype) ◆TGEV infects small intestinal villous enterocytes; Intestine occasionally upper respiratory tract Induces villous atrophy leading to vomiting and diarrhea which are the main clinical signs Lung ◆PRCV infects epithelial cells of the upper and lower respiratory tract and a few unidentified cells in the small intestine Moderate or subclinical respiratory disease occurs, but interstitial pneumonia is evident in most pigs TGEV MILLER Summary of genetic analysis of S gene deletion area and ORF3/3a, 3-1/3b of TGEV and PRCV strains (Kim et al 2000) Four Clinical Syndromes Occur with BCoV Infections Enteric Infections Calf diarrhea Diarrhea, dehydration Intestinal villous atrophy Winter dysentery Bloody diarrhea + upper respiratory infection Intestinal villous atrophy Respiratory Infections Calf respiratory disease Bovine respiratory disease complex (shipping fever) Target Age Groups Birth to 4 wks of age 6 months to adult 2 wks to 6 months 6-9-month-old feedlot cattle Cough, nasolacrimal discharge, pneumonia All BCoV isolates belong to 1 serotype (2 subtypes) and are pneumoenteric Only point mutations occur in the S gene of BCoV-E vs BCoV-R strains Which tissues do coronaviruses infect? Coronavirus Infected Tissues Macaque a SARS Pigs TGEV-V TGEV-A (vaccine) Cattle PRCV PEDV BCoV-E BCoV-R Viremia NT - - + - NT NT Upper Resp.Tract + + ++ ++ - + ++ Lower Resp. Tract + +/- + +++ - + +++ Intestine +/1/4 +++ + +/- ++ (colon) ++ (colon) ++ (colon) Intact Pt mutations b Deletion Intact (nt 214 and 655) (621-682 nt) S-gene a Fouchier, et al 2003 b Ballesteros et al, 1997 Pt mutations c (42 aa changes at 38 sites) c Hasoksuz, et al 2002 How do respiratory coronavirus infections in animals compare to those in humans? Respiratory Coronaviruses Clinical signs: Cells infected: Lesions/ Pathology: PRCV Cough ± Nasolacrimal discharge + Fever ± Pneumonia . Nares, Trachea, Alveoli, Bronchi Alveolar macrophages Interstitial pneumonia Duration of shedding: Nasal 3-10 days Fecal Variable, 0-a few days BCoV-R Cough Nasolacrimal discharge + Fever ± Pneumonia Nasal turbinates Trachea Bronchi, Alveoli Interstitial emphysema Bronchiolitis, alveolitis 5-10 days (17 days) 4-8 days (17 days) What Factors Exacerbate Respiratory Coronavirus Infections or Virus Shedding? 1. Aerosols Higher virus titers, longer shedding and more severe respiratory disease (Van Cott et al, 1993) 2. Dose Higher dose = higher titer, longer shedding (Van Cott et al, 1993) • Pigs given 108.5 TCID50 had more severe pneumonia and deaths than pigs exposed by contact (Jabrane et al, 1994) 3. Concurrent or sequential respiratory viral infections Porcine arterivirus (PRRSV) first, then PRCV after 5 days (Hayes et al, 2000) • Longer shedding of PRCV after dual infection • Fecal shedding of PRCV, mainly after dual infection • Prolonged fever, respiratory disease and reduced weight gain after dual infection PRCV first, then Swine Influenza Virus 2 days later (Van Reeth and Pensaert, 1994) • Enhanced respiratory disease Pig Lung tissue Control PRCV PRRSV PRCV What Factors Exacerbate Porcine Respiratory Coronavirus Infections or Virus Shedding? 4. Pigs infected with the Arterivirus, PRRSV or with PRCV followed by bacterial LPS in 5 days developed more severe respiratory disease upon LPS exposure and enhanced fever compared to pigs inoculated with each agent alone (Laborque et al, 2002; Van Reeth et al, 2002) 5.Treatment with immunosuppressive agents: the synthetic corticosteroid, dexamethasone Enhanced the severity of TGEV infections (Shimizu and Shimizu, 1979) In 1 of 4 cows inoculated with WD-BCoV-E, treatment also induced a recurrence of fecal BCoV shedding (Tsunemitsu et al, 1999) What Factors Exacerbate Respiratory Bovine Coronavirus Infections or Virus Shedding? 1. Calves with lower serum Ab titers (VN titer < 400) to BCoV were more likely to be infected and develop disease 2. Stress of shipping cattle to feedlots 3. Co-mingling cattle from different farms 4. Other concurrent respiratory infections (viruses and bacteria) Infectious Bronchitis Virus (IBV) Pathogenesis Primary site of infection is upper respiratory tract Trachea and Bronchi Virus detection Viremia Nasal secretions Feces and Urine Disease is most severe in baby chicks Other organs infected (sites of IBV persistence with periodic nasal shedding) Kidneys (Nephropathogenic strains) Tissue tropism of one IBV strain altered from respiratory to kidney tissues by serial passage in the cloaca (Uenaka et al 1998) Oviducts Intestine Feline Infectious Peritonitis Virus(FIPV) Pathogenesis Primary sites of infection are the pharyngeal, respiratory or intestinal epithelial cells Two major forms: Effusive- peritoneal fluid accumulation Non effusive –fever, CNS involvement Viremia occurs due to infection of monocytes Virus is distributed throughout the body in macrophages Lesions: pyogranulomas with thrombosis After antibody development: fulminant disease with 1) Immune complexes with complement, in sera and ascites fluids 2) Antibody dependent enhancement of infection Do coronaviruses cross the species barrier? Example: Oral inoculation of calves with enteric coronaviruses from captive wild ruminants Enteric coronavirus origin: Sambar Deer White-tailed Deer Waterbuck Calf inoculation Diarrhea: Fecal shedding: Seroconversion to BCV: Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Conclusion: Coronaviruses from wild ruminants can experimentally infect young calves (Tsunemitsu, et al 1995) Wild ruminants Cattle transmission ? Do coronaviruses cross the species barrier? Example: Oral inoculation of poultry with BCoV-E Turkey poults Diarrhea: Yes Fecal shedding: Yes (12 DPI) Seroconversion to BCoV: Yes Chicks No No NT Conclusion: Bovine coronavirus can experimentally infect baby turkeys (Ismail et al, 2001) Cattle Bird transmission ? EMERGING ZOONOTIC VIRAL INFECTIONS It is estimated that 75% of emerging human pathogens are zoonotic (Murphy et al,1998 Taylor et al 2001) and that 61% of all human pathogens are zoonotic (Woolhouse et al, 2002). Zoonotic pathogens that infect both domestic and wildlife hosts and have a broad host range, appear most likely to emerge (Cleaveland et al, 2001). RNA viruses are more likely to be zoonotic than DNA viruses (Morse,1997;Woolhouse et al, 2002). Viral RNA replicases lack proofreading functions leading to high mutation rates with more rapid evolution Quasispecies exist allowing plasticity within the viral population for adaptation to new hosts Zoonotic RNA virus examples: Influenza, Nipah, Hendra, Rift Valley Fever Virus, West Nile Virus, HIV, SARS CoV(?) FACTORS INFLUENCING VIRAL EMERGENCE Introduction of virus into a new host “Virus traffic” via ecologic changes, demographic changes, human activity/behavior (Lederberg et al,1992, Morse et al, 1997) Enhanced host susceptibility (immunosuppression, preexisting health conditions, malnutrition, poilymicrobial coinfections, etc) Establishment and dissemination within the new host population Increase in host movements (global travel, rural to urban migration), density, allow for greater spread Increasing numbers of infected individuals increase opportunity for transmissible variants to arise Human activity may disseminate vectors or reservoir CONTROL OF EMERGING/ZOONOTIC INFECTIONS Effective global disease surveillance and coordination of efforts Multidisciplinary research efforts and teams to investigate disease outbreaks For zoonotic diseases, the combined efforts of biomedical and veterinary scientists are essential, but few mechanisms currently exist to support this type of collaboration and cooperation CONCLUDING REMARKS Enteric coronaviruses alone can cause fatal infections in seronegative young animals; respiratory coronavirus infections are more often fatal in adults when combined with other factors (shipping fever in cattle) Factors that exacerbate respiratory coronavirus infections in animals include high exposure doses, respiratory coinfections (viruses, LPS), treatment with corticosteroids Knowledge of SARS pathogenesis (using appropriate animal models) is extremely important to design effective vaccines There are no vaccines to prevent respiratory coronavirus infections except for IBV infections in chickens Vaccination for IBV (killed or live) is complicated by the existence of multiple serotypes/subtypes Only short-term protection is needed because of the short life span of chickens REFERENCES Ballesteros, M.L., C.M. 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Infection and cross-protection studies of winter dysentery and calf diarrhea bovine coronavirus strains in colostrum-deprived and gnotobiotic calves. Am. J. Vet. Res. 57:48-53. Fouchier, R.A.M., T. Kuiken, M. Schutten, G. van Amerongen, G.J.J. van Doornum, B.G. van den Hoogen, M. Peiris, W. Lim, K. Stohr, A.D.M.E. Osterhaus. 2003. Koch postulates fulfilled for SARS virus. Nature 423:240. Guan,Y, et al. 2003. Isolation and characterization of viruses related to the SARS coronavirus from animals in Southern China. Science Express, Sept 4,2003 Hasoksuz, M., S. Sreevatsan, K.O. Cho, A.E. Hoet and L.J. Saif. 2002. Molecular analysis of the S1 subunit of the spike glycoprotein of respiratory and enteric bovine coronavirus isolates. Virus Res. 84:101-109. Hayes, J., K. Sestak, G. Myers, L. Kim, P. Stromberg, B. Byrum, R. Mohan, and L.J. Saif. 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Immunopath.70:203-21. REFERENCES Sestak, K. and L.J. Saif. 2002. Porcine coronaviruses. In Trends in Emerging Viral Infections of Swine (J.J. Zimmerman, et al, eds.) Iowa State Univ. Press, Ames, Iowa (In press). Shimizu, M. and Y. Shimizu. 1979. Effects of ambient temperatures on clinical and immune responses of pigs infected with transmissible gastroenteritis virus. Vet. Microbiol. 4:109-116. Shoup, D. I., D. J. Jackwood, and L. J. Saif. 1997. Active and passive immune responses to transmissible gastroenteritis virus (TGEV) in swine inoculated with recombinant baculovirus-expressed TGEV spike (S) glycoprotein vaccines. Am. J. Vet. Res. 58:242-250. Tsunemitsu, H., H. Reed, Z. El-Kanawati, D. Smith, and L. J. Saif. 1995. Isolation of coronaviruses antigenically indistinguishable from bovine coronavirus from a Sambar and white tailed deer and waterbuck with diarrhea. J. Clin. Microbiol. 33:3264-3269. Tsunemitsu, H., Z. El-Kanawati, D. Smith, H. Reed, and L. J. Saif. 1995. 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In vivo studies on cytokine involvement during acute viral respiratory disease of swine: troublesome but rewarding. Vet. Immunol. Immunopath. 87:161-168. Woolhouse, M.E.J. 2002. Population biology of emerging and re-emerging pathogens. Trends in Microbiol. 10: S3-S7