Infection of cynomolgus macaques (Macaca fascicularis) and rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta) with different wild-type measles viruses
Infection of cynomolgus macaques (Macaca fascicularis) and rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta) with different wild-type measles viruses
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Date
2015-11-23
Authors
El Mubarak, H. Sittana
Mukhtar, Moawia M.
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Publisher
university of khartoum
Abstract
Both rhesus and cynomolgus macaques have been used as animal models for measles
vaccination and immunopathogenesis studies. A number of studies have suggested that
experimental measles virus (MV) infection induces more-characteristic clinical features in
rhesus than in cynomolgus monkeys. In the present study, both macaque species were infected
with two different wild-type MV strains and clinical, virological and immunological parameters
were compared. The viruses used were a genotype C2 virus isolated in The Netherlands in 1991
(MV-Bil) and a genotype B3 virus isolated from a severe measles case in Sudan in 1997
(MV-Sudan). Following infection, all rhesus monkeys developed a skin rash and conjunctivitis,
which were less obvious in cynomolgus monkeys. Fever was either mild or absent in both species.
Virus reisolation profiles from peripheral blood mononuclear cells and broncho-alveolar lavage
cells and the kinetics of MV-specific IgM and IgG responses were largely identical in the two
animal species. However, in animals infected with MV-Sudan, viraemia appeared earlier and
lasted longer than in animals infected with MV-Bil. This was also reflected by the earlier
appearance of MV-specific serum IgM antibodies after infection with MV-Sudan. Collectively,
these data show that cynomolgus and rhesus macaques are equally susceptible to wild-type MV
infection, although infection in the skin seems to follow a different course in rhesus macaques.
MV-Sudan proved more pathogenic for non-human primates than MV-Bil, which may render it
more suitable for use in future pathogenesis studies.
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Keywords
Infection of cynomolgus macaques (Macaca fascicularis) and rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta) with different wild-type measles viruses