In Vivo Imaging Sheds Light on the Susceptibility and Permissivity of Carassius auratus to Cyprinid Herpesvirus 2 According to Developmental Stage
Date
2023-08-15Author
He, Bo
Sridhar, Arun
Streiff, Cindy
Deketelaere, Caroline
Zhang, Haiyan
Gao, Yuan
Hu, Yunlong
Pirotte, Sebastien
Delrez, Natacha
Davison, Andrew J.
Donohoe, Owen
Vanderplasschen, Alan F.C.
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Cyprinid herpesvirus 2 (CyHV-2) is a virus that causes mass mortality in economically
important Carassius spp. However, there have been no comprehensive studies into host susceptibility
or permissivity with respect to developmental stage, and the major portal of viral entry into the host
is still unclear. To help bridge these knowledge gaps, we developed the first ever recombinant strain
of CyHV-2 expressing bioluminescent and fluorescent reporter genes. Infection of Carassius auratus
hosts with this recombinant by immersion facilitated the exploitation of various in vivo imaging
techniques to establish the spatiotemporal aspects of CyHV-2 replication at larval, juvenile, and adult
developmental stages. While less susceptible than later developmental stages, larvae were most
permissive to CyHV-2 replication, leading to rapid systemic infection and high mortality. Permissivity
to CyHV-2 decreased with advancing development, with adults being the least permissive and, thus,
also exhibiting the least mortality. Across all developmental stages, the skin was the most susceptible
and permissive organ to infection at the earliest sampling points post-infection, indicating that it
represents the major portal of entry into these hosts. Collectively these findings provide important
fundamental insights into CyHV-2 pathogenesis and epidemiology in Carassius auratus with high
relevance to other related economically important virus-host models.
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