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A novel outbred mouse model of 2009 pandemic influenza and bacterial co-infection severity
Authors
A Didierlaurent
A García-Sastre
+50 more
A Ichikawa
A Kudva
A Shahangian
C Beadling
C Li
C Paget
C Reed
CL Small
CL Wu
CM Cameron
CR Crowe
D Bottomly
D Jia
DA Pociask
DC Angus
DJ Williams
DM Morens
EJ Chesler
ES Coro
GJ Jakab
GS Martin
J Goulding
JA McCullers
Jay K. Kolls
JE Kohlmeier
JK Taubenberger
John F. Alcorn
JS Nguyen-Van-Tam
K Sun
Kevin J. McHugh
KM Robinson
KZ Vardakas
LS Miller
M Miettinen
M Tashiro
M Tashiro
MP Longhi
MT Ferris
N Hagau
O Dienz
P Kumar
R Chia
RT Jr Davey
SA Fadel
Sivanarayana Mandalapu
Stephania Ann Cormier
Ted M. Ross
W Li
WJ Zhang
X Yu
Publication date
6 December 2013
Publisher
'Public Library of Science (PLoS)'
Doi
View
on
PubMed
Abstract
Influenza viruses pose a significant health risk and annually impose a great cost to patients and the health care system. The molecular determinants of influenza severity, often exacerbated by secondary bacterial infection, are largely unclear. We generated a novel outbred mouse model of influenza virus, Staphylococcus aureus, and coinfection utilizing influenza A/CA/07/2009 virus and S. aureus (USA300). Outbred mice displayed a wide range of pathologic phenotypes following influenza virus or co-infection ranging broadly in severity. Influenza viral burden positively correlated with weight loss although lung histopathology did not. Inflammatory cytokines including IL-6, TNF-α, G-CSF, and CXCL10 positively correlated with both weight loss and viral burden. In S. aureus infection, IL-1β, G-CSF, TNF-α, and IL-6 positively correlated with weight loss and bacterial burden. In co-infection, IL-1β production correlated with decreased weight loss suggesting a protective role. The data demonstrate an approach to identify biomarkers of severe disease and to understand pathogenic mechanisms in pneumonia. © 2013 McHugh et al
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