Comparative proteomic analysis reveals different responses in porcine lymph nodes to virulent and attenuated homologous African swine fever virus strains

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Author
Herrera Uribe, Juber
Jiménez-Marín, Ángeles
Lacasta, Anna
Monteagudo, Paula L.
Pina-Pedrero, Sonia
Rodríguez, Fernando
Moreno, Ángela
Garrido, Juan J.
Publisher
BMCDate
2018Subject
African swine feverASF
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Show full item recordAbstract
African swine fever (ASF) is a pathology of pigs against which there is no treatment or vaccine. Understanding the
equilibrium between innate and adaptive protective responses and immune pathology might contribute to the
development of strategies against ASFV. Here we compare, using a proteomic approach, the course of the in vivo
infection caused by two homologous strains: the virulent E75 and the attenuated E75CV1. Our results show a progressive
loss of proteins by day 7 post-infection (pi) with E75, reflecting tissue destruction. Many signal pathways were
affected by both infections but in different ways and extensions. Cytoskeletal remodelling and clathrin-endocytosis
were affected by both isolates, while a greater number of proteins involved on inflammatory and immunological
pathways were altered by E75CV1. 14-3-3 mediated signalling, related to immunity and apoptosis, was inhibited
by both isolates. The implication of the Rho GTPases by E75CV1 throughout infection is also evident. Early events
reflected the lack of E75 recognition by the immune system, an evasion strategy acquired by the virulent strains, and
significant changes at 7 days post-infection (dpi), coinciding with the peak of infection and the time of death. The
protein signature at day 31 pi with E75CV1 seems to reflect events observed at 1 dpi, including the upregulation of
proteosomal subunits and molecules described as autoantigens (vimentin, HSPB1, enolase and lymphocyte cytosolic
protein 1), which allow the speculation that auto-antibodies could contribute to chronic ASFV infections. Therefore,
the use of proteomics could help understand ASFV pathogenesis and immune protection, opening new avenues for
future research.