The mouse and ferret animal models are the most widely used models for influenza studies. Each has its advantages. The mouse model provides a relatively low-cost system with a variety of genetic backgrounds and an arsenal of commercially available immunologic reagents to examine the host response to infection. It is the primary choice for preliminary evaluation of vaccine and therapeutic candidates. However, it does have drawbacks: most human influenza viruses need to be adapted by serial-passages to get the virulent form of isolated to infect laboratory mice. After all, the clinical course of disease does not recapitulate that of the human disease.
The ferret model of influenza virus infection more accurately represents the course of human influenza disease. Ferrets are susceptible to infection by a wide variety of human influenza virus isolates without adaptation. Ferrets develop a primarily upper respiratory tract infection and have tractable clinical markers of disease. Influenza virus infection and replication in the lower respiratory tract results in histopathological lesions in the lungs and induction of cytokines characteristic of the innate immune response. In addition, ferrets can be used for models of influenza transmission. The drawbacks to the ferret model are the higher costs associated with husbandry of larger animals and a sparse supply of commercially available immunologic reagents to examine the host response to infection, genetic heterogeneity (out-of-bred), small sample group (n<5) in a study. Despite these limitations, ferrets are still is an excellent small mammalian model in influenza study. .
Comparison of different animal models for influenza infection. Oh, D. Y., & Hurt, A. C. (2016) Frontiers in microbiology, 7, 80.
To aid in the development of influenza virus vaccine and therapeutics, Noble Life Sciences has established both the mouse and ferret models of influenza infection.
The Mouse Model of Influenza Virus Infection
Titration in Balb/c mice: Mouse adapted A/Puerto Rico/8-MC/1934 (H1N1) (obtained from BEI Resources/NIAID, NR-29022) was amplified in 10-day old serum-pathogen free (SPF) embryonated chicken eggs and stored at -80° C until used for titration. A single vial of egg amplified mouse-adapted Influenza A PR/8/34 was removed from the freezer and thawed. Serial 10-fold dilutions were prepared in PBS + 25 mM HEPES buffer. Mice in groups of eight to ten were anesthetized by inhalation of isoflurane and inoculated intranasally with 30 uL (15 uL/nostril) of the diluted virus using a pipet tip resulting in inoculations ranging from 3 x 10 2 mL to 3 x 10-7 mL virus per mouse. Mice were observed for signs of morbidity and mortality for 10 days. Individual body weights and body temperatures were measured daily. Animals in which body weights dropped below 80% of their pre-challenge weight (Day 0), were humanely euthanized and scored as non-survivors.
The virus displayed a dose-dependent effect on both survival and body weight loss (Figure 1). Variation in survival and weight loss between treated and untreated mice challenged with titrated virus provide primary end-points in the mouse for the development of anti-influenza therapeutics and vaccines. Additional end points for evaluations include clinical scoring, quantification of virus in the respiratory tract and extrapulmonary organs, production of neutralizing antibodies, and analysis of the immunological response.
The Ferret Model of Influenza Virus Infection
Infection of ferrets with Influenza A
Influenza A/CA/04/2009 (H1N1) pdm (obtained from BEI Resources/NIAID) was amplified and titrated in MDCK cells. Ferrets assigned to two groups of six each were lightly anesthetized and challenged intranasally with 102 TCID50 (group 1) or 105 TCID50 (group 2) in a total volume of 1 mL (0.5 mL/nostril). Animals were monitored daily for clinical signs of illness, daily body weights and twice daily body temperatures. Nasal washes were collected on study Days 1 through 7 for determination of viral load in the upper respiratory tract by TCID50 in MDCK cells. Three animals in each group were humanely euthanized on days 4 and 7 and lung tissue from the upper left lobe was collected for determination of viral load in the lower respiratory tract by qRT-PCR and for histopathology.
Animals in both groups displayed a decrease in body weight and increase in temperature following viral challenge. Animals in the high titer challenge group (group 2) had a more rapid increase in body temperature and displayed a greater decrease in body weight than those in low titer group (Figure 2).
Viral titers in the upper respiratory were quantified by determination of TCID50 in MDCK cells of nasal washes collected on days 1 through 7. The geometric mean and standard deviation of the viral titers on each day are presented in Table 1 and Figure 3. Peak viral titers in the nasal cavities occurred on days 1 and 2 for the high dose challenge group and on days 2 and 3 for the low dose group, correlating with the onset of clinical signs of weight loss and increase in body temperature. The mean viral titers on peak days was 4.11 and 3.97 log10TCID50/mL on days 2 and 3 for the low dose inoculum and 4.78 and 4.79 log10 TCID50/mL on days 1 and 2 for the high dose inoculum. Viral titers decreased for both groups following peak days. Viral titers in nasal washes collected on day 7 were below the limit of quantification ( < 1.6 log10) for both groups.
Table 1. Viral titers of of A/California/04/2009 pdm(H1N1) in nasal washes of challenged ferrets. Values are the log10 of geometric mean of the TCID50/mL virus at each time point. *Viral titers in Day 7 nasal washes were below the limit of quantification.
Viral titers in lung tissue were determined by RT-qPCR of total RNA extracted from the upper left lobe of the lungs. Lung tissue was removed from a portion of the upper left lobe of three ferrets from each group on Days 4 and 7 following euthanasia. Total RNA was extracted from pre-weighed sections and immediately frozen in dry ice and quantified by one-step RT-qPCR using primers and TaqMan probe specific for amplification and quantification of A/California/04/2009viral gene segment 7 encoding the viral Matrix protein. The quantity of viral RNA in each sample was interpolated from a standard curve generated by amplification of serial dilutions of quantified gene segment 7 sequences. The data are presented as the total copies of viral RNA per gram of lung tissue (Figure 4).
Viral RNA was detectable in the lower respiratory tract in all animals of both dose groups at day 4 and day 7 following viral challenge. Mean viral RNA copies were greatest in the day 4 high inoculum animals; however, there was a large variation in the amount of viral RNA between the individual animals in this group. There was no significant difference in mean RNA levels at days 4 and 7 for the low dose group and day 7 for the high dose group with day 7 samples for both groups having less variation between the individual animals.
Histopathology of lung tisuse was performed on sections of the upper left lobe of lung tissues collected on days 4 and 7 following euthanasia. Stained slides were prepared from tissues fixed in 10% buffered formalin. Tissues were scored for total lung appearance, bronchiole necrosis and hyperplasia, alveolar inflammation, and vessel cuffing using a five point scoring matrix of: 0, normal; 1, minimal; 2, mild; 3, moderate; 4, severe. The mean lung pathology scores for each challenge group and time point are presented in Table 2. Overall, lesions induced by the virus included bronchiolar necrosis, bronchiolar hyperplasia, perivascular cuffing and edema, and interstitial pneumonia. The high titer ferret group generally had a higher score of lesions and lung involvement.
Conclusion
The ferret model provides multiple diagnostic criteria for evaluation countermeasure for influenza disease, including clinical signs of illness, changes in body weight and temperature, viral replication in the upper and lower respiratory tracts, and histopathological lesions in the lungs that are similar to those seen during natural infection of humans.
Ferrets can be infected by non-adapted human influenza viruses and virus replication in the lung coincides with the induction of cytokines characteristic of the innate immune response, a potentially important factor in understanding early antiviral mechanisms.
Taken together, the mouse and ferret models of influenza infection provide an essential gateway to the discovery and development of countermeasures for influenza virus disease.