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Originally published as JGV in Press, 10.1099/vir.0.014282-0 on September 9, 2009 J Gen Virol 90 (2009), 2956-2964; DOI 10.1099/vir.0.014282-0

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Rat respiratory coronavirus infection: replication in airway and alveolar epithelial cells and the innate immune response

C. Joel Funk1, Rizwan Manzer1, Tanya A. Miura2, Steve D. Groshong1, Yoko Ito1, Emily A. Travanty1, Jennifer Leete1, Kathryn V. Holmes3 and Robert J. Mason1

1 National Jewish Health, 1400 Jackson Street, Denver, CO 80206, USA
2 Department of Microbiology, Molecular Biology and Biochemistry, University of Idaho, Moscow, ID 83844, USA
3 Department of Microbiology, University of Colorado Denver, Aurora, CO 80110, USA

Correspondence
Robert J. Mason
masonb{at}njhealth.org

The rat coronavirus sialodacryoadenitis virus (SDAV) causes respiratory infection and provides a system for investigating respiratory coronaviruses in a natural host. A viral suspension in the form of a microspray aerosol was delivered by intratracheal instillation into the distal lung of 6–8-week-old Fischer 344 rats. SDAV inoculation produced a 7 % body weight loss over a 5 day period that was followed by recovery over the next 7 days. SDAV caused focal lesions in the lung, which were most severe on day 4 post-inoculation (p.i.). Immunofluorescent staining showed that four cell types supported SDAV virus replication in the lower respiratory tract, namely Clara cells, ciliated cells in the bronchial airway and alveolar type I and type II cells in the lung parenchyma. In bronchial alveolar lavage fluid (BALF) a neutrophil influx increased the population of neutrophils to 45 % compared with 6 % of the cells in control samples on day 2 after mock inoculation. Virus infection induced an increase in surfactant protein SP-D levels in BALF of infected rats on days 4 and 8 p.i. that subsided by day 12. The concentrations of chemokines MCP-1, LIX and CINC-1 in BALF increased on day 4 p.i., but returned to control levels by day 8. Intratracheal instillation of rats with SDAV coronavirus caused an acute, self-limited infection that is a useful model for studying the early events of the innate immune response to respiratory coronavirus infections in lungs of the natural virus host.

Three supplementary figures are available with the online version of this paper.







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