Publication | Open Access
Respiratory and intestinal epithelial cells exhibit differential susceptibility and innate immune responses to contemporary EV-D68 isolates
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Citations
43
References
2021
Year
Innate Immune SystemImmunologyViral PathogenesisPathologyInnate ImmunityImmune SystemHost Immune ResponseInflammationContemporary Ev-d68 IsolatesGastrointestinal VirusInfection ControlImmunopathologyEv-d68 IsolatesAfm OutbreakVirologyClinical MicrobiologyDifferential SusceptibilityMolecular VirologyMucosal ImmunologyPathogenesisIntestinal Epithelial CellsVirus-host InteractionEarlier IsolatesMedicineViral Immunity
Enterovirus D68 (EV-D68) has been implicated in outbreaks of severe respiratory illness and is associated with acute flaccid myelitis (AFM). EV-D68 is often detected in patient respiratory samples but has also been detected in stool and wastewater, suggesting the potential for both respiratory and enteric routes of transmission. Here, we used a panel of EV-D68 isolates, including a historical pre-2014 isolate and multiple contemporary isolates from AFM outbreak years, to define the dynamics of viral replication and the host response to infection in primary human airway cells and stem cell-derived enteroids. We show that some recent EV-D68 isolates have decreased sensitivity to acid and temperature compared with earlier isolates and that the respiratory, but not intestinal, epithelium induces a robust type III interferon response that restricts infection. Our findings define the differential responses of the respiratory and intestinal epithelium to contemporary EV-D68 isolates and suggest that a subset of isolates have the potential to target both the human airway and gastrointestinal tracts.
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