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Treatment with Ad5-Porcine Interferon-α Attenuates Ebolavirus Disease in Pigs

Chandrika Senthilkumaran, Andrea Kroeker, Gregory A. Smith, Carissa Embury‐Hyatt, Brad Collignon, Elizabeth Ramírez-Medina, Paul A. Azzinaro, Bradley Pickering, Fayna Díaz-San Segundo, Hana M. Weingartl, Teresa de los Santos

2022Pathogens14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Under experimental conditions, pigs infected with Ebola Virus (EBOV) develop disease and can readily transmit the virus to non-human primates or pigs. In the event of accidental or intentional EBOV infection of domestic pigs, complex and time-consuming safe depopulation and carcass disposal are expected. Delaying or preventing transmission through a reduction in viral shedding is an absolute necessity to limit the spread of the virus. In this study, we tested whether porcine interferon-α or λ3 (porIFNα or porIFNλ3) delivered by a replication-defective human type 5 adenovirus vector (Ad5-porIFNα or Ad5-porIFNλ3) could limit EBOV replication and shedding in domestic pigs. Our results show that pigs pre-treated with Ad5-porIFNα did not develop measurable clinical signs, did not shed virus RNA, and displayed strongly reduced viral RNA load in tissues. A microarray analysis of peripheral blood mononuclear cells indicated that Ad5-porIFNα treatment led to clear upregulation in immune and inflammatory responses probably involved in protection against disease. Our results indicate that administration of Ad5-porIFNα can potentially be used to limit the spread of EBOV in pigs.

Topics & Concepts

VirologyViral sheddingEbola virusEbolavirusVirusInterferonViral replicationPeripheral blood mononuclear cellViral loadBiologyImmune systemImmunologyBiochemistryIn vitroViral Infections and Outbreaks ResearchVirus-based gene therapy researchViral gastroenteritis research and epidemiology
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