Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W2011296521> ?p ?o ?g. }
- W2011296521 endingPage "423" @default.
- W2011296521 startingPage "417" @default.
- W2011296521 abstract "The emergence of new infectious diseases and old diseases with new pathogenic properties is a burgeoning worldwide problem. Severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) and acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) are just two of the most widely reported recent emerging infectious diseases. What are the factors that contribute to the rapid evolution of viral species? Various hypotheses have been proposed, all involving opportunities for virus spread (for example, agricultural practices, climate changes, rainforest clearing or air travel). However, the nutritional status of the host, until recently, has not been considered a contributing factor to the emergence of infectious disease. In this review, we show that host nutritional status can influence not only the host response to the pathogen, but can also influence the genetic make-up of the viral genome. This latter finding markedly changes our concept of host–pathogen interactions and creates a new paradigm for the study of such phenomena. The emergence of new infectious diseases and old diseases with new pathogenic properties is a burgeoning worldwide problem. Severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) and acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) are just two of the most widely reported recent emerging infectious diseases. What are the factors that contribute to the rapid evolution of viral species? Various hypotheses have been proposed, all involving opportunities for virus spread (for example, agricultural practices, climate changes, rainforest clearing or air travel). However, the nutritional status of the host, until recently, has not been considered a contributing factor to the emergence of infectious disease. In this review, we show that host nutritional status can influence not only the host response to the pathogen, but can also influence the genetic make-up of the viral genome. This latter finding markedly changes our concept of host–pathogen interactions and creates a new paradigm for the study of such phenomena. The unexpected and sudden emergence of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) is the most widespread recent example of the ability of viruses to continue to cause a great deal of morbidity and mortality in human populations. Recently, the outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) has again demonstrated our continuing vulnerability to newly emergent viruses. It is important to understand the underlying mechanisms involved in the emergence of new viral pathogens with altered pathogenic potential. Understanding how emergence occurs will assist in recognizing conditions of risk for new viral outbreaks and also in developing therapeutic strategies to prevent or limit them. Data from our laboratory [1Beck M.A. et al.Rapid genomic evolution of a non-virulent coxsackievirus B3 in selenium-deficient mice results in selection of identical virulent isolates.Nat. Med. 1995; 1: 433-436Crossref PubMed Scopus (326) Google Scholar, 2Nelson H.K. et al.Host nutritional selenium status as a driving force for influenza virus mutations.FASEB J. 2001; 15: 1846-1848PubMed Google Scholar, 3Beck M.A. Levander O.A. Dietary oxidative stress and the potentiation of viral infection.Annu. Rev. Nutr. 1998; 18: 93-116Crossref PubMed Scopus (72) Google Scholar] and others [4Broome C.S. et al.An increase in selenium intake improves immune function and poliovirus handling in adults with marginal selenium status.Am. J. Clin. Nutr. 2004; 80: 637-638Google Scholar, 5Akaike T. et al.Viral mutation accelerated by nitric oxide production during infection in vivo.FASEB J. 2000; 14: 1447-1454Crossref PubMed Google Scholar] have demonstrated that one driving force for the emergence of new viral variants is the nutritional status of the host. Using two very different viruses (coxsackievirus and influenza virus) as model systems we have shown that a host deficiency in either selenium (Se) or vitamin E, or an excess of iron, results in a change in the viral genome. In other words, specific, stable and reproducible viral mutations occur in the genome when nutritionally compromised animals are infected with these viruses; these mutations result in increased virulence of both coxsackievirus and influenza virus [1Beck M.A. et al.Rapid genomic evolution of a non-virulent coxsackievirus B3 in selenium-deficient mice results in selection of identical virulent isolates.Nat. Med. 1995; 1: 433-436Crossref PubMed Scopus (326) Google Scholar, 2Nelson H.K. et al.Host nutritional selenium status as a driving force for influenza virus mutations.FASEB J. 2001; 15: 1846-1848PubMed Google Scholar]. Once these mutations occur, even hosts with normal nutritional status are susceptible to the newly virulent virus. This work represents a new area of research into the interaction of host nutrition and emerging infectious disease. In 1935, a severe outbreak of an endemic cardiomyopathy that afflicted mainly infants, children and women of child-bearing age occurred in Keshan County, Heilongjiang Province, China [6Yang G.Q. et al.Selenium-related endemic diseases and the daily selenium requirement of humans.World Rev. Nutr. Diet. 1988; 55: 98-152PubMed Google Scholar]. Within a number of years, Keshan disease (as the condition came to be known) affected thousands of people and it became the top disease priority of the Chinese Ministry of Public Health. Several hypotheses were proposed to explain the cause of the disease, but it was not until 1979 that a connection was established between nutritional Se deficiency and Keshan disease. The amount of evidence that supported this hypothesis was impressive. Epidemiological surveys showed that Se levels in the soils, foods and people residing in highly endemic areas were very low compared with levels in control regions free of the disease [7Keshan Disease Research GroupEpidemiologic studies on the etiologic relationship of selenium and Keshan Disease.Chin. Med. J. 1979; 92: 477-482PubMed Google Scholar]. Moreover, Chinese scientists carried out a large intervention trial that demonstrated quite conclusively that supplementation of individuals with nutritional amounts of sodium selenite effectively prevented the disease [8Keshan Disease Research GroupObservations on effect of sodium selenite in prevention of Keshan Disease.Chin. Med. J. 1979; 92: 471-476PubMed Google Scholar]. Widespread use of Se supplements in the endemic Keshan disease areas led to a drastic decline in the number of cardiomyopathies observed in these areas. Despite the great success of the ‘selenium hypothesis’ in explaining multiple features of Keshan disease, it became apparent that nutritional Se deficiency in itself could not account for all the characteristics of the disease. For example, Keshan disease exhibits wide swings in prevalence from one year to another and even from one season to another. Such behavior is more consistent with an infectious disease than with a nutritional deficiency. The Chinese scientists realized this and were able to demonstrate that certain enteroviruses, particularly a coxsackievirus B4 isolated from a Keshan disease victim from Chuxong County in Yunnan Province, were able to induce heart lesions with greater severity in mice fed a diet low in Se than in mice fed the same diet supplemented with Se [9Ge K.-Y. et al.The protective effect of selenium against viral myocarditis in mice.in: Combs G.F. Selenium in Biology and Medicine (Part B). Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1987: 761-768Google Scholar]. More recently, it has been possible to show that enterovirus isolates from patients with heart muscle disease in a Se-deficient area of China were predominantly coxsackievirus group B serotypes in the region in which Keshan disease is endemic. Thus, these viruses might contribute to the pathology of Keshan disease, as coxsackie B viruses are known etiological agents of myocarditis [10Peng T. et al.Characterization of enterovirus isolates from patients with heart muscle disease in a selenium-deficient area of China.J. Clin. Microbiol. 2000; 38: 3538-3543PubMed Google Scholar]. To understand the relationship between host nutritional status and virus infection, we used our well-characterized murine model of coxsackievirus-induced myocarditis. Coxsackievirus B3 (CVB3) infection of mice can cause myocarditis, similar to that found in human populations. However, infection of mice with an avirulent strain of CVB3 (designated CVB3/0) does not lead to myocarditis, although replicating virus can be isolated from the hearts of infected mice. For our model, we divided mice into two groups and fed one group a normal diet and the other group a diet deficient in Se. After four weeks, all mice were infected with the benign strain CVB3/0. As expected, the infected mice fed the Se-sufficient diet did not develop any cardiac inflammation. However, the Se-deficient mice developed moderate to severe myocarditis [11Beck M.A. et al.Benign human enterovirus becomes virulent in selenium-deficient mice.J. Med. Virol. 1994; 43: 166-170Crossref PubMed Scopus (159) Google Scholar]. To determine if the increase in virulence was due to host factors alone, or a result of alterations in the virus, we isolated virus from the hearts of Se-deficient mice and passed it back into Se-adequate mice. If host factors alone were the cause of the increase in virulence, then the Se-adequate mice infected with virus isolated from Se-deficient mice should not develop disease. However, the infected mice did develop myocarditis, suggesting that the virus itself had been altered [11Beck M.A. et al.Benign human enterovirus becomes virulent in selenium-deficient mice.J. Med. Virol. 1994; 43: 166-170Crossref PubMed Scopus (159) Google Scholar]. Sequencing of the viral genomic RNA obtained from infected Se-adequate and Se-deficient mice confirmed that a viral genome change had occurred (Table 1). Out of the ten nucleotide positions that were reported to co-vary with cardiovirulence in CVB3 strains [12Tu Z. et al.The cardiovirulent phenotype of coxsackievirus B3 is determined at a single site in the genomic 5′ nontranslated region.J. Virol. 1995; 69: 4607-4618PubMed Google Scholar], six reverted to the virulent genotype in those virions that replicated in Se-deficient mice [1Beck M.A. et al.Rapid genomic evolution of a non-virulent coxsackievirus B3 in selenium-deficient mice results in selection of identical virulent isolates.Nat. Med. 1995; 1: 433-436Crossref PubMed Scopus (326) Google Scholar]. No nucleotide changes were found in viral genomes isolated from Se-adequate control mice. The mutations persisted after the now virulent virus was passed into naive Se-adequate mice, producing pathology (Figure 1). Therefore, replication in a Se-deficient host led to specific viral mutations, which changed an avirulent virus into a virulent one. Once these mutations occurred, even Se-adequate mice were susceptible to the newly pathogenic virus.Table 1Comparison of nucleotide sequences of coxsackievirus B3 isolated from Se-adequate, Se-deficient and GPX-1 knockout miceaAbbreviations: AA, amino acid; GPx-1 KO, glutathione peroxidase-1 knockout mice (n=3); nc, non-coding; Nt, nucleotide; ntr, non-translated region; Se+, selenium-adequate (control) mouse; Se−, selenium-deficient mouse.Nucleotide position (genome region)Infecting virus: CVB30Virus isolated fromCardiovirulent virus: CVB320NtAASe+Se+Se+Se−Se−Se−GPx−1 KONtAA234 (5′ ntr)C(nc)CCCTTTTT(nc)788 (VP4)GGlyGGGAAAAAArg2271 (VP3)ATyrAAATTTTTPhe2438 (VP3)GGluGGGCCCCCGln2690 (VP1)GGluGGGGGGAALys3324 (2A)CAlaCCCTTTTTVal7334 (3′ ntr)C(nc)CCCTTTTT(nc)a Abbreviations: AA, amino acid; GPx-1 KO, glutathione peroxidase-1 knockout mice (n=3); nc, non-coding; Nt, nucleotide; ntr, non-translated region; Se+, selenium-adequate (control) mouse; Se−, selenium-deficient mouse. Open table in a new tab One of the functions of Se is that it acts as an antioxidant, primarily through its association with the antioxidant enzyme glutathione peroxidase (GPX). GPX incorporates Se as selenocysteine (a novel 21st amino acid in addition to the 20 commonly recognized ones). When Se is limiting in the diet the activity of GPX declines. Se is also incorporated into more than 20 other proteins, some of which have functions other than antioxidant protection. To determine if a decrease in GPX activity was a crucial step in Se-associated change in virulence, we infected GPX-1 knockout mice with CVB3/0. These mice, similar to Se-deficient mice, developed myocarditis, whereas infected wild-type mice did not. Sequencing of the viral genome demonstrated mutation to the cardiovirulent genotype at seven nucleotide positions, of which six were identical to the mutations found in the virus isolated from Se-deficient mice [13Beck M.A. et al.Glutathione peroxidase protects mice from viral-induced myocarditis.FASEB J. 1998; 12: 1143-1149Crossref PubMed Scopus (180) Google Scholar] (Table 1). Because vitamin E also acts as an antioxidant, although it works by a very different mechanism to Se, we wanted to determine if a lack of vitamin E would also affect the viral genome. As was found for the Se-deficient mice, mice fed a diet deficient in vitamin E and infected with CVB3/0 developed myocarditis [14Beck M.A. et al.Vitamin E deficiency intensifies the myocardial injury of coxsackievirus B3 infection of mice.J. Nutr. 1994; 124: 345-358PubMed Scopus (95) Google Scholar]. Sequencing of the virus revealed that the same mutations occurred in the virus isolated from vitamin E-deficient mice as were found for Se-deficient mice. All of the experimental data led to the conclusion that oxidative stress is the common mechanism for the viral genome changes. The redox-active ferrous ion is known to exert a powerful pro-oxidant effect in vivo as a result of its reaction with hydrogen peroxide to produce the extremely reactive hydroxyl free radical. In this way, excess dietary iron can damage a variety of cellular components, including lipids, nucleic acids and proteins [15Welch K.D. et al.Deleterious iron-mediated oxidation of biomolecules.Free Radic. Biol. Med. 2002; 32: 577-583Crossref PubMed Scopus (186) Google Scholar]. Therefore, it was of interest to determine the effect of dietary iron overload on the ability of CVB3/0 to cause cardiopathology in our mouse model. Mice were fed either a diet containing a normal level of iron (35 parts per million or ppm) or an iron overload diet containing 1050 ppm of iron. At each level of dietary iron, half the mice received the same diet lacking vitamin E. After consuming their assigned diets for four weeks, the mice were infected with CVB3/0 (the amyocarditic strain of CVB3). In those mice that received the vitamin E-supplemented diets, consumption of the high iron diet resulted in elevated viral titers and increased heart damage versus the normal iron controls [16Beck, M.A. et al. Benign coxsackievirus damages heart muscle in iron-loaded vitamin E deficient mice. Free Radic. Biol. Med. (in press)Google Scholar]. Consumption of the high iron diet that lacked vitamin E resulted in further increases in viral titers and heart damage. Therefore, here we have another example of how nutritional manipulation of host oxidative stress status can have an impact on viral pathogenesis, such that an amyocarditic form of the virus was converted into a myocarditic one. It has been reported that the clinical course of some HIV patients might be unfavorably affected by elevated iron status [17Gordeuk V.R. et al.Iron status and the outcome of HIV infection: an overview.J. Clin. Virol. 2001; 20: 111-115Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (99) Google Scholar]. In pregnant Zimbabwean women, for example, there was a positive association reported between HIV-1 viral load and serum ferritin levels [18Friss H. et al.Iron, haptoglobin phenotype, and HIV-1 viral load: a cross-sectional study among pregnant Zimbabwean women.J. Acquir. Immune Defic. Syndr. 2003; 33: 74-81Crossref PubMed Scopus (41) Google Scholar]. However, this positive association between HIV progression and iron status is not universally observed [19Olsen A. et al.Low dose iron supplementation does not increase HIV-1 load.J. Acquir. Immune Defic. Syndr. 2004; 36: 637-638Crossref PubMed Scopus (38) Google Scholar, 20Semba R.D. et al.Iron status and indicators of human immunodeficiency virus disease severity among pregnant women in Malawi.Clin. Infect. Dis. 2001; 32: 1496-1499Crossref PubMed Scopus (24) Google Scholar], and therefore the correlation is controversial [21Weinberg G.A. et al.Iron status and the severity of HIV infection in pregnant women.Clin. Infect. Dis. 2001; 33: 2098-2099Crossref PubMed Scopus (6) Google Scholar, 22Clark T.D. Semba R.D. Iron supplementation during human immunodeficiency virus infection: a double-edged sword?.Med. Hypotheses. 2001; 57: 476-479Abstract Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (34) Google Scholar]. Needless to say, any damaging effect of iron in HIV infection would have important public health implications because of the general use of iron supplements to prevent or cure anemia. Because of the strong combined effect of iron excess and vitamin E deficiency observed during infection with CVB3/0, it might be useful to assess vitamin E nutritional status in HIV patients who are given iron supplements. The results observed during coxsackievirus infection suggested that viruses other than CVB3 might be susceptible to host nutritional stresses. To test this hypothesis, Se-deficient and Se-adequate mice were infected with influenza A/Bangkok/1/79, which normally induces only a mild pneumonitis in mice. Mice that were Se-deficient were found to develop severe lung pathology post-infection, whereas the Se-adequate mice developed only mild pathology [23Beck M.A. et al.Selenium deficiency increases the pathology of an influenza virus infection.FASEB J. 2001; 15: 1481-1483PubMed Google Scholar]. Influenza virus contains a single-stranded segmented RNA genome, a lipid bilayer, which is of host derivation, and a matrix protein that lies underneath the lipid layer. The viral genome consists of eight RNA segments containing genes that encode different viral proteins, including the hemagglutinin (HA) and neuraminidase (NA) proteins (required for entry into and exit from the infected host cell, respectively), matrix proteins (M1 and M2), polymerase proteins and nucleoproteins. Viruses recovered from both Se-deficient and Se-adequate mice have been sequenced [2Nelson H.K. et al.Host nutritional selenium status as a driving force for influenza virus mutations.FASEB J. 2001; 15: 1846-1848PubMed Google Scholar]. Consistent mutations in the M gene were recovered from Se-deficient mice (Table 2). Three separate isolates from three individual Se-deficient mice all had identical mutations in 29 positions. One of the three isolates had an additional five mutations, with one additional amino acid change. Therefore, similar to what was found for coxsackievirus B3, host deficiency in Se leads to increased viral mutations in the influenza virus genome, resulting in a more virulent phenotype.Table 2Influenza A/Bangkok/1/79 M1 gene of the infecting virus and of virus isolated from selenium (Se)-deficient and Se-adequate miceaData represent sequenced isolates from lungs of six individual mice.NucleotideInfectingVirus isolated frompositionvirusSe+Se+Se+Se−Se−Se−AAbAbbreviations: AA, amino acid. change136AAAACCCNone205GGGGAAANone238GGGGGGANone309GGGGAAAR to K322AAAAGGGNone325CCCCTTTNone328AAAAGGGNone331AAAAGGGNone334TTTTCCCNone370AAAACCCNone371GGGGTTTA to S406CCCCTTTNone439AAAAGGGNone454CCCCAAANone455CCCCCCANone502CCCCTTTNone503AAAACCCNone524GGGGAAANone525GGGGGGAT to A544AAAACCCNone566CCCCTTTNone567CCCCCCTNone568GGGGAAANone610AAAAGGGNone619GGGGAAANone652CCCCTTTNone655GGGGAAANone667GGGGAAAA to T669GGGGGGANone670AAAAGGGNone677GGGGAAAA to T712AAAAGGGNone716GGGGAAAD to N740AAAAGGGT to Aa Data represent sequenced isolates from lungs of six individual mice.b Abbreviations: AA, amino acid. Open table in a new tab How do changes in the M protein lead to increased virulence of the influenza virus? The M1 protein has been shown to influence virulence by increasing viral replication due to rapid uncoating from the viral ribonucleoproteins. Therefore, the faster the uncoating occurs, the quicker viral replication can begin [24Lamb R.A. Choppin P.W. The gene structure and replication of influenza virus.Annu. Rev. Biochem. 1983; 52: 467-506Crossref PubMed Scopus (280) Google Scholar, 25Smeenk C.A. Brown E.G. The influenza virus variant A/FM/1/47-MA possesses single amino acid replacements in the hemagglutinin, controlling virulence, and in the matrix protein, controlling virulence as well as growth.J. Virol. 1994; 68: 530-537Crossref PubMed Google Scholar]. Consequently, mutations in the M region of the genome might lead to increased viral replication of the mutant virus. Increased viral titers in turn might lead to increased lung pathology, and hence increased pathogenicity of the virus. In support of this hypothesis, viral titers of the mutant virus were higher in infected mice compared with wild-type virus [23Beck M.A. et al.Selenium deficiency increases the pathology of an influenza virus infection.FASEB J. 2001; 15: 1481-1483PubMed Google Scholar]. Poliovirus, similar to the coxsackieviruses, is a human enterovirus and a member of the Picornaviridae family. But in contrast to coxsackievirus, poliovirus cannot be studied using the usual mouse models, because rodents do not normally carry the human poliovirus receptor. However, it is possible to generate transgenic mice that express poliovirus receptors, thereby making them suitable for investigating numerous properties of poliovirus, including neurovirulence, attenuation and tissue tropism. Another experimental approach, of course, would be to study poliovirus in human subjects rather than in animal models. Broome et al. [4Broome C.S. et al.An increase in selenium intake improves immune function and poliovirus handling in adults with marginal selenium status.Am. J. Clin. Nutr. 2004; 80: 637-638Google Scholar] supplemented three groups of healthy people (22 members, including 11 males and 11 females in each group) with 0, 50 or 100 μg of Se (as sodium selenite) per day for 15 weeks (for a discussion of what constitutes a nutritionally relevant dose of Se, see Ref. [26Levander O.A. Evolution of human dietary standards for selenium.in: Hatfield D.L. Selenium: its Molecular Biology and Role in Human Health. Kluwer Academic Publishers, 2001: 299-311Crossref Google Scholar]). All subjects were judged to be of relatively low initial Se status as indicated by plasma Se concentrations <1.2 μmol/L. After six weeks of supplementation, all subjects were given an oral live attenuated poliomyelitis vaccine. Supplementation continued uninterrupted after vaccination for a further nine weeks. Supplementation with Se increased several indices of Se status in these subjects, including plasma Se concentrations and lymphocyte glutathione peroxidase activities. Supplementation also enhanced certain aspects of the cellular immune response, such as increased interferon (IFN)-gamma production, earlier peak T-cell proliferation, and increased number of T-helper cells. Humoral immune responses were not affected. However, perhaps the most intriguing observation was the fact that individuals receiving Se exhibited a more rapid clearance of the poliovirus. Moreover, poliovirus RT–PCR products isolated from the feces of supplemented subjects had fewer mutations. The Broome study [4Broome C.S. et al.An increase in selenium intake improves immune function and poliovirus handling in adults with marginal selenium status.Am. J. Clin. Nutr. 2004; 80: 637-638Google Scholar] presents for the first time direct evidence for the involvement of Se status in determining viral replication and mutation rates in people. These data confirm in humans what Beck and colleagues [3Beck M.A. Levander O.A. Dietary oxidative stress and the potentiation of viral infection.Annu. Rev. Nutr. 1998; 18: 93-116Crossref PubMed Scopus (72) Google Scholar] have been saying on the basis of their mouse models for several years, namely that Se (and vitamin E) exerts a powerful control over viral replication and mutation rates in vivo, such that a nutritional deficiency of either of these two dietary antioxidants enables RNA viruses to convert to more virulent strains. Additional study of the influence of Se and/or vitamin E on the evolution of viruses in large population groups appears warranted. Previous work has shown that ROS and RNS play a crucial role in the development of influenza-induced pathogenesis in the lung [27Akaike T. et al.Pathogenesis of influenza virus-induced pneumonia: involvement of both nitric oxide and oxygen radicals.Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 1996; 93: 2448-2453Crossref PubMed Scopus (449) Google Scholar, 28Akaike T. Maeda H. Nitric oxide and virus infection.Immunology. 2000; 101: 300-308Crossref PubMed Scopus (311) Google Scholar, 29Van der Vliet A. Cross C.E. Oxidants, nitrosants, and the lung.Am. J. Med. 2000; 109: 398-421Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (110) Google Scholar]. Akaike et al. [5Akaike T. et al.Viral mutation accelerated by nitric oxide production during infection in vivo.FASEB J. 2000; 14: 1447-1454Crossref PubMed Google Scholar] reported increased rates of mutation of an RNA (Sendai) virus that had been exposed to reactive nitrogen species (RNS), such as nitric oxide (NO) and peroxynitrite (ONOO−). Both NO and O2− have been shown to increase the pathogenesis of an influenza virus infection in laboratory experiments [27Akaike T. et al.Pathogenesis of influenza virus-induced pneumonia: involvement of both nitric oxide and oxygen radicals.Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 1996; 93: 2448-2453Crossref PubMed Scopus (449) Google Scholar, 30Akaike T. et al.8-Nitroguanosine formation in viral pneumonia and its implication for pathogenesis.Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 2003; 100: 685-690Crossref PubMed Scopus (145) Google Scholar, 31Maeda H. Akaike T. Oxygen free radicals as pathogenic molecules in viral diseases.Proc. Soc. Exp. Biol. Med. 1991; 198: 721-727Crossref PubMed Scopus (99) Google Scholar]. Notably, an inducible form of NOS (nitric oxide synthetase or iNOS) is strongly activated by a variety of pathogens, including neurotropic, cardiotropic and pneumotropic viruses (e.g. coxsackievirus or influenza virus), causing an overproduction of NO in infected tissues [28Akaike T. Maeda H. Nitric oxide and virus infection.Immunology. 2000; 101: 300-308Crossref PubMed Scopus (311) Google Scholar]. Importantly, inhibition or elimination (knockout) of iNOS activity significantly reduces pathological consequences of various viral infections [28Akaike T. Maeda H. Nitric oxide and virus infection.Immunology. 2000; 101: 300-308Crossref PubMed Scopus (311) Google Scholar], including pneumonitis caused by influenza virus in mice [27Akaike T. et al.Pathogenesis of influenza virus-induced pneumonia: involvement of both nitric oxide and oxygen radicals.Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 1996; 93: 2448-2453Crossref PubMed Scopus (449) Google Scholar]. The work of these groups with RNS and of our group with Se and vitamin E deficiency strongly suggests that oxidative and/or nitrosative stress in the host tissues significantly contributes to the modification of viral RNA during virus replication. Therefore, a nutritional deficiency of an antioxidant that leads to increased production of ROS and/or RNS is probably responsible for viral mutations. RNA viruses have adapted to fill all available host niches – from bacteria to plants, fish, birds, reptiles, amphibians and mammals. One method that viruses use to exploit a wide range of hosts is that of genetic diversity. A population of viruses exists as a large number of closely related mutants, rather than a single fixed sequence, and is therefore known as a ‘quasispecies’. This variation occurs because of the error-prone replication of RNA viruses, lack of viral proofreading enzymes and short generation times. During viral replication, the quasispecies will reach equilibrium and a consensus, or dominant sequence, will emerge. It has been suggested that maintaining a diverse quasispecies provides an evolutionary advantage to the virus and enables rapid adaptation to changing host environmental conditions. Within the quasispecies structure, a variety of subpopulations can coexist; and by adjusting their numbers, the population as a whole can move rapidly through ‘sequence space’ from one ‘fitness peak’ to another. Thus, determination of the ‘genomic sequence,’ even for a carefully cloned population, is really an assessment of the dominant (or consensus) sequence. The dominant genotype might shift gradually, or it could change suddenly if environmental pressures are imposed [32Quer J. et al.Contingent neutrality in competing viral populations.J. Virol. 2001; 75: 7315-7320Crossref PubMed Scopus (39) Google Scholar]. Most variant sequences, however, are present as tiny minorities within the overall population; nevertheless, it has been shown that a given sequence that once had a selective advantage might persist through many replicative cycles, unobserved by phenotype or consensus sequencing, and might re-emerge rapidly when it is again favored by selective pressure. This phenomenon has been termed the ‘memory’ of viral quasispecies [33Ruiz-Jarabo C.M. et al.Memory in viral quasispecies.J. Virol. 2000; 74: 3543-3547Crossref PubMed Scopus (164) Google Scholar]. We hypothesize that increased oxidative stress in the host, induced by dietary deficiencies in antioxidants or by increased consumption of pro-oxidant nutrients, might provide a selective environment by which the more virulent genotype (already present in the viral quasispecies) is able to outcompete the original consensus sequence. Consequently, a new genotype becomes dominant, which has a more pathogenic phenotype. How does the nutritionally induced oxidative stress status of the host contribute to the selection of a new viral quasispecies? One possibility is an altered immune response. Our own work [3Beck M.A. Levander O.A. Dietary oxidative stress and the potentiation of viral infection.Annu. Rev. Nutr. 1998; 18: 93-116Crossref PubMed Scopus (72) Google Scholar, 11Beck M.A. et al.Benign human enterovirus becomes virulent in selenium-deficient mice.J. Med. Virol. 1994; 43: 166-170Crossref PubMed Scopus (159) Google Scholar, 23Beck M.A. et al.Selenium deficiency increases the pathology of an influenza virus infection.FASEB J. 2001; 15: 1481-1483PubMed Google Scholar, 34Beck M.A. et al.The role of oxidative stress in viral infections.Ann. N.Y. Acad. Sci. 2000; 917: 906-912Crossref PubMed Scopus (98) Google Scholar], and the work of many others [35Grimble R.F. Nutritional modulation of immune function.Proc. Nutr. Soc. 2001; 60: 389-397Crossref PubMed Google Scholar, 36Bhaskaram P. Micronutrient malnutrition, infection, and immunity: an overview.Nutr. Rev. 2002; 60: S40-S45Crossref PubMed Scopus (281) Google Scholar, 37Field C.J. et al.Nutrients and their role in host resistance to infection.J. Leukoc. Biol. 2002; 71: 16-32PubMed Google Scholar], has demonstrated that host nutritional deficiency leads to impaired immune function. For example, a deficiency in Se can lead to decreased T cell function, impaired neutrophil chemotaxis and decreased antibody production [38Arthur J.R. et al.Selenium in the immune system.J. Nutr. 2003; 133: 1457S-1459SPubMed Google Scholar]. An impaired immune response might permit a more virulent viral quasispecies, normally kept in check, to escape elimination by the immune response and therefore replace the previously dominant less-virulent genotype. It is also possible that a shift of the intracellular redox balance toward oxidation permits faster viral replication, consequently increasing the size of the quasispecies population and permitting selection of rare variants. Nencioni et al. [39Nencioni L et al. (2003) Influenza A virus replication is dependent on an antioxidant pathway that involves GSH and Bcl-2. FASEB J 17, 758–760 10.1096/fj.02-0508fje (www.fasebj.org)Google Scholar] reported that lower intracellular concentrations of reduced glutathione permitted influenza virus replication to higher titers in several cell lines, apparently by inhibiting expression of late viral proteins, including HA and M. A third possibility is that an increase in nutritionally induced oxidative stress could lead to a new viral quasispecies by direct oxidative damage to the viral RNA, thus accelerating the mutation rate. In addition, the oxidative damage to cell membranes and enzymes of the replication complex might also accelerate the viral mutation rate, thus leading to a new dominant viral quasispecies with altered pathogenicity. To date, the precise mechanisms for selection of new viral variants in a host under nutritionally induced oxidative stress are not known. However, we would propose that several mechanisms are operating together to influence the outcome. Thus, both immune dysfunction and oxidative damage to the viral RNA might be occurring together to drive the selection of a new viral quasispecies. Figure 1 presents a schematic of the hypothesis put forward by our data. The viral quasispecies (in which the consensus or dominant genotype is avirulent) is inoculated into either a nutritionally adequate or nutritionally deficient host. However, within the quasispecies is a small minority population of virus with pathogenic potential. Replication of the viral quasispecies within a nutritionally adequate animal (not oxidatively stressed) results in the dominant consensus genotype remaining dominant and therefore no disease is induced. However, replication of the viral quasispecies within a nutritionally deficient host (oxidatively stressed) leads to a much different outcome. The previous minority genotype is now able to outcompete and replace the previously dominant genotype. This might be due to impaired immune function as a result of the nutritional deficiencies, enabling the minority genotype to escape immune clearance. In addition, oxidative damage to intracellular structures might favor the replication of the minority genotype, again enabling the expression of a new viral variant, which now replaces the previous consensus sequence. Further, the mutation rate might be increased by direct damage to viral RNA, resulting in faster emergence of new genotypes. These mechanisms are not mutually exclusive and might work together. The old nutritional adage ‘You are what you eat!’ appears to have found novel application in our work relating host diet to viral virulence. By using relatively simple nutritional manipulations we and others were able to increase the oxidative stress in our host animals either by withholding crucial cellular antioxidants from their diets (e.g. selenium or vitamin E) or by feeding with excess amounts of a pro-oxidant nutrient (e.g. iron). All techniques tested to increase oxidative stress in host animals led to the common outcome of increased viral virulence with reproducible genome mutations found in two RNA viruses: coxsackievirus and influenza. The demonstration that this phenomenon occurs within two different viral RNA families suggests that host nutritional deficiencies can have an effect on several different viral infections. These results represent a new paradigm for the interaction between host nutritional status and the emergence of new viral diseases in the human population. Widespread nutritional deficiencies occur in many developing countries, which are frequently the site of emergence of new viral diseases as well as old viral diseases with new pathogenic properties. We suggest that host nutritional status be considered when studying the causes for viral emergence, and that adequate nutrition of the population is an important form of protection against the emergence of new viral pathogens." @default.
- W2011296521 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W2011296521 creator A5055000470 @default.
- W2011296521 creator A5076163789 @default.
- W2011296521 creator A5091386022 @default.
- W2011296521 date "2004-09-01" @default.
- W2011296521 modified "2023-10-10" @default.
- W2011296521 title "Host nutritional status: the neglected virulence factor" @default.
- W2011296521 cites W1481096307 @default.
- W2011296521 cites W1501074197 @default.
- W2011296521 cites W1586871468 @default.
- W2011296521 cites W1864601388 @default.
- W2011296521 cites W1870659914 @default.
- W2011296521 cites W1966880947 @default.
- W2011296521 cites W1973809950 @default.
- W2011296521 cites W1977675750 @default.
- W2011296521 cites W2012584742 @default.
- W2011296521 cites W2022956267 @default.
- W2011296521 cites W2023908986 @default.
- W2011296521 cites W2034382408 @default.
- W2011296521 cites W2039409172 @default.
- W2011296521 cites W2047301149 @default.
- W2011296521 cites W2051542961 @default.
- W2011296521 cites W2058679166 @default.
- W2011296521 cites W2059392422 @default.
- W2011296521 cites W2068797155 @default.
- W2011296521 cites W2078220909 @default.
- W2011296521 cites W2091089657 @default.
- W2011296521 cites W2091090889 @default.
- W2011296521 cites W2098686081 @default.
- W2011296521 cites W2103108759 @default.
- W2011296521 cites W2105102773 @default.
- W2011296521 cites W2119906602 @default.
- W2011296521 cites W2120638695 @default.
- W2011296521 cites W2125953482 @default.
- W2011296521 cites W2138135736 @default.
- W2011296521 cites W2141074713 @default.
- W2011296521 cites W2141482843 @default.
- W2011296521 cites W2145645476 @default.
- W2011296521 cites W2156481361 @default.
- W2011296521 cites W2159299677 @default.
- W2011296521 cites W2167134476 @default.
- W2011296521 cites W2167514351 @default.
- W2011296521 cites W2168863734 @default.
- W2011296521 cites W2179548044 @default.
- W2011296521 cites W2191787796 @default.
- W2011296521 cites W581194450 @default.
- W2011296521 doi "https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tim.2004.07.007" @default.
- W2011296521 hasPubMedCentralId "https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/7127785" @default.
- W2011296521 hasPubMedId "https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/15337163" @default.
- W2011296521 hasPublicationYear "2004" @default.
- W2011296521 type Work @default.
- W2011296521 sameAs 2011296521 @default.
- W2011296521 citedByCount "225" @default.
- W2011296521 countsByYear W20112965212012 @default.
- W2011296521 countsByYear W20112965212013 @default.
- W2011296521 countsByYear W20112965212014 @default.
- W2011296521 countsByYear W20112965212015 @default.
- W2011296521 countsByYear W20112965212016 @default.
- W2011296521 countsByYear W20112965212017 @default.
- W2011296521 countsByYear W20112965212018 @default.
- W2011296521 countsByYear W20112965212019 @default.
- W2011296521 countsByYear W20112965212020 @default.
- W2011296521 countsByYear W20112965212021 @default.
- W2011296521 countsByYear W20112965212022 @default.
- W2011296521 countsByYear W20112965212023 @default.
- W2011296521 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W2011296521 hasAuthorship W2011296521A5055000470 @default.
- W2011296521 hasAuthorship W2011296521A5076163789 @default.
- W2011296521 hasAuthorship W2011296521A5091386022 @default.
- W2011296521 hasBestOaLocation W20112965211 @default.
- W2011296521 hasConcept C104317684 @default.
- W2011296521 hasConcept C126831891 @default.
- W2011296521 hasConcept C159047783 @default.
- W2011296521 hasConcept C18903297 @default.
- W2011296521 hasConcept C2522874641 @default.
- W2011296521 hasConcept C2781090273 @default.
- W2011296521 hasConcept C3020564189 @default.
- W2011296521 hasConcept C54355233 @default.
- W2011296521 hasConcept C60987743 @default.
- W2011296521 hasConcept C86803240 @default.
- W2011296521 hasConcept C89423630 @default.
- W2011296521 hasConceptScore W2011296521C104317684 @default.
- W2011296521 hasConceptScore W2011296521C126831891 @default.
- W2011296521 hasConceptScore W2011296521C159047783 @default.
- W2011296521 hasConceptScore W2011296521C18903297 @default.
- W2011296521 hasConceptScore W2011296521C2522874641 @default.
- W2011296521 hasConceptScore W2011296521C2781090273 @default.
- W2011296521 hasConceptScore W2011296521C3020564189 @default.
- W2011296521 hasConceptScore W2011296521C54355233 @default.
- W2011296521 hasConceptScore W2011296521C60987743 @default.
- W2011296521 hasConceptScore W2011296521C86803240 @default.
- W2011296521 hasConceptScore W2011296521C89423630 @default.
- W2011296521 hasIssue "9" @default.
- W2011296521 hasLocation W20112965211 @default.
- W2011296521 hasLocation W20112965212 @default.
- W2011296521 hasLocation W20112965213 @default.
- W2011296521 hasOpenAccess W2011296521 @default.