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Title: MICR 454L


1
MICR 454L
  • Emerging and Re-Emerging
  • Infectious Diseases
  • Lecture 12
  • Ebola Virus, Dengue virus
  • (ReadingEmerging Viruses)
  • Dr. Nancy McQueen Dr. Edith Porter

2
Overview
  • Ebola Virus
  • Dengue Virus

Brief history Morphology Genome Repl
ication cycle Diseases Pathogenesis Diagnosis Trea
tment Prevention Threats
3
Ebola Virus
4
Ebola Virus - Brief History
  • In 1976 two epidemics of hemorrhagic fever
    occurred simultaneously in Zaire and Sudan.
  • Over 500 cases were reported with a mortality
    rate of 88 in Zaire and 54 in Sudan
  • A new virus that was isolated as the causative
    agent was named after the Ebola River in Zaire.
  • Subsequent outbreaks occurred in Sudan in 1977
    and 1979.
  • In 1994 the first Ebola case was reported in West
    Africa.
  • In 1989 an outbreak occurred in cynomolgus
    monkeys imported from the Philippines to a
    facility in Reston, Virginia .
  • Luckily that species does not appear to be
    pathogenic to humans

5
Ebola Virus - Brief History
  • Sporadic outbreaks, most in equatorial Africa,
    continue to occur
  • Endemic in Sudan, Zaire, and the Ivory Coast.
  • Very pathogenic for monkeys and apes - argues
    against these animals as the natural host.
  • Recent studies - virus can replicate in fruit and
    insect-eating bats without any ill effects to the
    bat.
  • Thus, bats may be the natural reservoir for the
    virus.

6
Ebola Virus - Taxonomy
  • Ebola virus belongs to the family Filoviridae,
    genus Ebolavirus
  • There are four identified subtypes, three of
    which infect humans
  • Filamentous, helical, enveloped virus
  • Linear SS, - RNA genome

7
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8
Ebola Virus Replication Cycle
Budding from the plasma membrane
Penetration via receptor mediated endocytosis
Fusion with endosomal membrane (uncoating)
mRNA synthesis and genome replication in the
cytoplasm
9
Ebola Virus Transmission to Humans
  • How the virus first appears in a human at the
    start of an outbreak has not been determined.
  • ? contact with an infected animal.
  • After the first case-patient in an outbreak
    setting is infected, virus can be transmitted
    via
  • Direct contact with the blood and/or secretions
    of an infected person.
  • Contact with objects, such as needles, that have
    been contaminated with infected secretions.
  • Sexual contact
  • Aerosol transmission has been documented in
    non-human primates, but not in humans

10
Ebola Virus - Diseases/Pathogenesis
  • Incubation - 2 to 21 days
  • Symptoms
  • abrupt - characterized by fever, headache, joint
    and muscle aches, sore throat, and weakness
  • followed by diarrhea, vomiting, and stomach pain
  • rash, red eyes and hiccups may also occur
  • dendritic cells and macrophages initially
    infected followed by hepatocytes, and, in latter
    stages, endothelial cells.
  • virus evades host defenses by producing proteins
    (vp24, vp35) that interfere with interferon
    signaling pathway.

11
Ebola Virus Pathophysiology of the Disease
  • Clinical infection in human and nonhuman primates
    is associated with rapid and extensive viral
    replication in all tissues.
  • Viral replication is accompanied by widespread
    and severe focal necrosis.
  • The most severe necrosis occurs in the liver.
  • A viral glycoprotein, sGP binds to a
    neutrophil-specific receptor and inhibits early
    neutrophil activation.
  • sGP also may be responsible for the profound
    lymphopenia that characterizes Ebola infection
  • A second viral glycoprotein binds to endothelial
    cells but not to neutrophils, allowing Ebola
    virus to invade, replicate in, and destroy
    endothelial cells.

12
Ebola Virus - Pathophysiology of the Diseases
  • Destruction of endothelial surfaces causes the
    vessels to leak and bleed.
  • Destruction of the endothelial surfaces can lead
    to disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC),
    and this, combined with the liver destruction may
    contribute to the hemorrhagic manifestations that
    characterize Ebola infections.
  • The two major factors in Ebola virus pathogenesis
    are the impairment of the immune response and
    vascular dysfunction.
  • Death results from liver damage and dysfunction,
    shock, and the DIC which leads to internal and
    external bleeding
  • mortality rate ranges from 30-90

13
Ebola Hemorrhagic Fever
14
Ebola Virus- Diagnosis
  • Serology
  • ELISA
  • Molecular tests
  • RT-PCR
  • Virus isolation - Must use biocontainment level
    IV facility!

15
Ebola Virus - Treatment
  • There is no standard treatment for Ebola
    hemorrhagic fever (HF).
  • Patients receive supportive therapy - balancing
    the patients fluids and electrolytes,
    maintaining their oxygen status and blood
    pressure, and treating them for any complicating
    infections.
  • Ribavirin treatment has been tried with little
    success.

16
Ebola Virus - Prevention
  • No vaccine is currently available, but many are
    in development
  • Practical viral hemorrhagic fever isolation
    precautions, or barrier nursing techniques must
    be used. These techniques include
  • the wearing of protective clothing, such as
    masks, gloves, gowns, and goggles
  • the use of infection-control measures, including
    complete equipment sterilization
  • the isolation of Ebola HF patients from contact
    with unprotected persons.
  • direct contact with the body of a deceased
    patient should be prevented.

17
Ebola Virus - Threats
  • Sporadic epidemics continue to occur
  • challenge of developing additional diagnostic
    tools to assist in early diagnosis of Ebola HF
  • challenge of conducting ecological investigations
    of Ebola virus and its possible reservoir (bats).
  • challenge to determine how the virus is
    transmitted to humans must be acquired to prevent
    future outbreaks effectively.
  • Use as bioterrorism weapon
  • Kills too quickly?
  • Aerosol spread?

18
Take Home Message
  • Ebola virus belongs to the family Filoviridae
  • Enveloped with linear SS, - RNA genome
  • Reservoir appears to be bats
  • Virus targets dendritic cells, macrophages,
    hepatocytes, endothelial cells
  • Virus impairs immune function in several ways
  • Liver and endothelial cell destruction? DIC ?
    internal and external bleeding
  • High mortality rate
  • Diagnosis via serology, molecular tests, virus
    isolation (level IV biocontainment)
  • Treatment - supportive care
  • Vaccines in development

19
Dengue Virus
20
Brief History
  • The first cases of Dengue Fever (DF) were
    recorded in 1779 in Batavia, Indonesia, and Cairo
  • In 1780, there was an epidemic reported in
    Philadelphia, PA.
  • For the past 200 years, pandemics have been
    recorded in tropical and subtropical climates at
    10 to 30 year intervals.
  • Although DF is not a new disease, it can be
    classified as an emerging disease.
  • Since 1945, the number of reported cases of DF
    surged because of increased urbanization and
    travel

21
Dengue Virus- Classification
  • Is in the family Flaviviridae, genus flavivirus
  • Belong to Group B arboviruses (arthropod borne
    animal viruses)
  • Transmitted by female Aedes aegypti mosquitoes
  • Has 4 serotypes (DEN-1, 2, 3, 4)
  • Enveloped, single-stranded RNA genome

22
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23
Dengue Virus Replication Cycle
mRNA synthesis and genome replication in the
cytoplasm
Budding from ER
exocytosis
24
Transmission of Dengue Virusby Aedes aegypti
Mosquito refeeds /
Mosquito feeds /
transmits virus
acquires virus
Intrinsic incubation period
Viremia
Viremia
0
5
8
12
16
20
24
28
DAYS
Human 1
Human 2
25
Replication and Transmissionof Dengue Virus
1. Virus transmitted to human in mosquito
saliva
2. Virus replicates in target organs
3. Virus infects white blood cells and
lymphatic tissues
4. Virus released and circulates in blood
26
Replication and Transmissionof Dengue Virus
5. Second mosquito ingests virus with blood
6. Virus replicates in mosquito midgut
and other organs, infects salivary glands
7. Virus replicates in salivary glands
27
Diseases
  • Undifferentiated fever
  • Classic dengue fever
  • Dengue hemorrhagic fever
  • Dengue shock syndrome

28
Undifferentiated Fever
  • most common manifestation of dengue
  • 87 of students infected are either asymptomatic
    or only mildly symptomatic

29
Classic Dengue Fever
  • Fever
  • Headache
  • Muscle and joint pain
  • Nausea/vomiting
  • Rash (petechiae)
  • Hemorrhagic manifestations
  • Encephalitis
  • Decreased level of consciousness lethargy,
    confusion, coma
  • Seizures
  • Nuchal rigidity
  • Paresis (slight paralysis)

30
Petechiae
31
Dengue Hemorrhagic Fever (DHF)
  • Skin hemorrhages
    petechiae, purpura, ecchymoses
  • Gingival bleeding
  • Nasal bleeding
  • Gastro-intestinal bleeding
    hematemesis, melena (dark stools),
    hematochezia (bloody stools)
  • Hematuria
  • Increased menstrual flow

32
Clinical Case Definition forDengue Hemorrhagic
Fever
4 Necessary Criteria
  • Fever, or recent history of acute fever
  • Hemorrhagic manifestations
  • Low platelet count (100,000/mm3 or less)
  • Objective evidence of leaky capillaries
  • elevated hematocrit (20 or more over baseline)
  • low albumin
  • pleural or other effusions

33
Pleural Effusion Index
Vaughn DW, Green S, Kalayanarooj S, et al. Dengue
in the early febrile phase viremia and antibody
responses. J Infect Dis 1997 176322-30.
34
Clinical Case Definition for Dengue Shock Syndrome
  • 4 criteria for DHF
  • Evidence of circulatory failure manifested
    indirectly by all of the following
  • Rapid and weak pulse
  • Narrow pulse pressure (? 20 mm Hg) OR hypotension
    for age
  • Cold, clammy skin and altered mental status
  • Shock is direct evidence of circulatory failure

35
Risk Factors For Dengue Hemorrhagic Fever (DHF)
  • Second infection with a different serotype
  • Due to pre-existing, non-neutralizing anti-dengue
    antibody
  • Presence of maternal antibody to a different
    serotype
  • Virus strain
  • Virus serotype
  • DHF risk is greatest for DEN-2, followed by
    DEN-3, DEN-4 and DEN-1
  • Host genetics
  • Age
  • Higher risk in locations with two or more
    serotypes circulating simultaneously at high
    levels (hyperendemic transmission)

36
Hypothesis on Pathophysiologyof DHF
  • Persons who have experienced a dengue infection
    develop serum antibodies that can neutralize the
    dengue virus of that same (homologous) serotype.

1
1
Dengue 1 virus
Neutralizing antibody to Dengue 1 virus
Non-neutralizing antibody
Complex formed by neutralizing antibody and virus
37
Hypothesis on Pathophysiologyof DHF
  • In a subsequent infection, the pre-existing
    heterologous non-neutralizing antibodies form
    complexes with the new infecting virus serotype,
    but do not neutralize the new virus.

Dengue 2 virus
Non-neutralizing antibody to Dengue 1 virus
Complex formed by non-neutralizing antibody and
virus
38
Hypothesis on Pathophysiologyof DHF
  • Antibody-dependent enhancement of virus uptake -
    Dengue virus, complexed with non-neutralizing
    antibodies binds to Fc receptor and enters
    monocytes/macrophages (Note - This entry into
    monocytes or macrophages is not dependent on the
    cell having the receptor to which the virus must
    normally bind for entry.)

Fc receptor
Fc region
Dengue 2 virus
Non-neutralizing antibody
Complex formed by non-neutralizing antibody and
Dengue 2 virus
39
Hypothesis on Pathophysiologyof DHF
  • Hemorrhagic manifestations that characterize DHF
    and DSS due to
  • Infected monocytes/macrophages release of
    vasoactive mediators, resulting in increased
    vascular permeability.
  • circulating dengue antigen-antibody complexes
    that activate complement, resulting in the
    release of vasoactive mediaters.
  • the process of immune elimination of infected
    cells, that releases proteases and lymphokines
    that activate complement, coagulation cascades
    (leads to DIC) and vascular permeability factors.

40
Diagnosis
  • ELISA
  • Virus isolation
  • Cell culture
  • Mosquito inoculation
  • Fluorescent antibody test
  • RT-PCR

41
Diagnosis -Tourniquet Test
  • Inflate blood pressure cuff to a point midway
    between systolic and diastolic pressure for 5
    minutes
  • Positive test 20 or more petechiae per 1 inch2
    (6.25 cm2)

Pan American Health Organization Dengue and
Dengue Hemorrhagic Fever Guidelines for
Prevention and Control. PAHO Washington, D.C.,
1994 12.
42
Positive Tourniquet Test
43
Treatment
  • Fluids
  • Rest
  • Antipyretics (avoid aspirin and non-steroidal
    anti-inflammatory drugs)
  • Monitor blood pressure, hematocrit, platelet
    count, level of consciousness
  • Avoid invasive procedures when possible
  • Unknown if the use of steroids, intravenous
    immune globulin, or platelet transfusions to
    shorten the duration or decrease the severity of
    thrombocytopenia is effective
  • Patients in shock may require treatment in an
    intensive care unit

44
Mosquito Barriers
  • Only needed until fever subsides, to prevent
    Aedes aegypti mosquitoes from biting patients and
    acquiring virus
  • Keep patient in screened sickroom or under a
    mosquito net

45
Prevention
  • No licensed vaccine at present
  • Effective vaccine must be tetravalent
  • Field testing of an attenuated tetravalent
    vaccine currently underway
  • Effective, safe and affordable vaccine will not
    be available in the immediate future

46
Threats
  • Dengue virus causes about 100 million cases of
    acute febrile disease annually, including more
    than 500,000 reported cases of DHF/DSS and up to
    50,000 deaths.
  • Currently, dengue is endemic in 112 countries.
  • From 1977 to 2004, a total of 3,806 suspected
    cases of imported dengue were reported in the
    United States.
  • Dengue epidemic in Brazil in April, 2008 killed
    106 but now seems to be abating

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48
Take Home Message
  • Dengue virus is in the family Flaviviridae
  • Enveloped, single-stranded RNA genome
  • 4 serotypes
  • Transmitted by female Aedes aegypti mosquito
  • Causes undifferentiated fever, dengue fever,
    dengue hemorrhagic fever (skin hemorrhages, low
    platlet count, leaky capillaries) , dengue shock
    syndrome ( circulatory collapse and shock)
  • Risk factors for DHF include secondary infection
    with a different serotype - due to
    non-neutralizing antibodies
  • Hemorrhagic manifestations due to increased
    vascular permeability and coagulation activation
  • Diagnosis includes tourniquet test
  • Treatment is rest, fluids, antipyretics
  • Tetravalent vaccine in development

49
Resources
  • The Microbial Challenge, by Krasner, ASM Press,
    Washington DC, 2002.
  • Brock Biology of Microorganisms, by Madigan and
    Martinko, Pearson Prentice Hall, Upper Saddle
    River, NJ, 11th ed, 2006.
  • Microbiology An Introduction, by Tortora, Funke
    and Case Pearson Prentice Hall 9th ed, 2007.
  • Fundamentals of Molecular Virology, by Nicholas
    Acheson Wiley and Sons 2007
  • Human Virology by Collier and Oxford, Oxford
    University Press 2nd edition, 2000.
  • www.cdc.gov
  • http//www.defenseindustrydaily.com/images/MISC_Eb
    ola_Patient.jpg
  • http//www.kcom.edu/faculty/chamberlain/website/le
    ctures/lecture/IMAGE/HEMFEVM.GIF
  • http//www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dvbid/dengue/index.htmc
    urrent

50
Resources
  • www.cdc.gov
  • http//www.hepcprimer.com/images/cut-model-with-te
    xt.gif
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