Squamous epitheliotropism of Enterovirus A71 in human epidermis and oral mucosa

Hand-foot-and-mouth disease is a self-limiting paediatric infectious disease commonly caused by Enterovirus A71 (Genus: Enterovirus, Family: Picornaviridae). Typical lesions in and around the hands, feet, oral cavity and other places may rarely be complicated by acute flaccid paralysis and acute enc...

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Main Authors: Phyu, W.K., Ong, Kien Chai, Kong, C.K., Khalil, A.A., Ramanujam, T.M., Wong, Kum Thong
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2017
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Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/19061/1/Squamous_epitheliotropism_of_Enterovirus_A71_in_human_epidermis_and_oral_mucosa.pdf
http://eprints.um.edu.my/19061/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/srep45069
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spelling my.um.eprints.190612019-03-13T04:43:03Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/19061/ Squamous epitheliotropism of Enterovirus A71 in human epidermis and oral mucosa Phyu, W.K. Ong, Kien Chai Kong, C.K. Khalil, A.A. Ramanujam, T.M. Wong, Kum Thong R Medicine Hand-foot-and-mouth disease is a self-limiting paediatric infectious disease commonly caused by Enterovirus A71 (Genus: Enterovirus, Family: Picornaviridae). Typical lesions in and around the hands, feet, oral cavity and other places may rarely be complicated by acute flaccid paralysis and acute encephalomyelitis. Although virus is readily cultured from skin vesicles and oral secretions, the cellular target/s of Enterovirus A71 in human skin and oral mucosa are unknown. In Enterovirus A71-infected human skin and oral mucosa organotypic cultures derived from the prepuce and lip biopsies, focal viral antigens and viral RNA were localized to cytoplasm of epidermal and mucosal squamous cells as early as 2 days post-infection. Viral antigens/RNA were associated with cytoplasmic vacuolation and cellular necrosis. Infected primary prepuce epidermal keratinocyte cultures showed cytopathic effects with concomitant detection of viral antigens from 2 days post-infection. Supernatant and/or tissue homogenates from prepuce skin organotypic cultures and primary prepuce keratinocyte cultures showed viral titres consistent with active viral replication. Our data strongly support Enterovirus A71 squamous epitheliotropism in the human epidermis and oral mucosa, and suggest that these organs are important primary and/or secondary viral replication sites that contribute significantly to oral and cutaneous viral shedding resulting in person-to-person transmission, and viraemia, which could lead to neuroinvasion. Nature Publishing Group 2017 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://eprints.um.edu.my/19061/1/Squamous_epitheliotropism_of_Enterovirus_A71_in_human_epidermis_and_oral_mucosa.pdf Phyu, W.K. and Ong, Kien Chai and Kong, C.K. and Khalil, A.A. and Ramanujam, T.M. and Wong, Kum Thong (2017) Squamous epitheliotropism of Enterovirus A71 in human epidermis and oral mucosa. Scientific Reports, 7 (1). p. 45069. ISSN 2045-2322 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/srep45069 doi:10.1038/srep45069
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
language English
topic R Medicine
spellingShingle R Medicine
Phyu, W.K.
Ong, Kien Chai
Kong, C.K.
Khalil, A.A.
Ramanujam, T.M.
Wong, Kum Thong
Squamous epitheliotropism of Enterovirus A71 in human epidermis and oral mucosa
description Hand-foot-and-mouth disease is a self-limiting paediatric infectious disease commonly caused by Enterovirus A71 (Genus: Enterovirus, Family: Picornaviridae). Typical lesions in and around the hands, feet, oral cavity and other places may rarely be complicated by acute flaccid paralysis and acute encephalomyelitis. Although virus is readily cultured from skin vesicles and oral secretions, the cellular target/s of Enterovirus A71 in human skin and oral mucosa are unknown. In Enterovirus A71-infected human skin and oral mucosa organotypic cultures derived from the prepuce and lip biopsies, focal viral antigens and viral RNA were localized to cytoplasm of epidermal and mucosal squamous cells as early as 2 days post-infection. Viral antigens/RNA were associated with cytoplasmic vacuolation and cellular necrosis. Infected primary prepuce epidermal keratinocyte cultures showed cytopathic effects with concomitant detection of viral antigens from 2 days post-infection. Supernatant and/or tissue homogenates from prepuce skin organotypic cultures and primary prepuce keratinocyte cultures showed viral titres consistent with active viral replication. Our data strongly support Enterovirus A71 squamous epitheliotropism in the human epidermis and oral mucosa, and suggest that these organs are important primary and/or secondary viral replication sites that contribute significantly to oral and cutaneous viral shedding resulting in person-to-person transmission, and viraemia, which could lead to neuroinvasion.
format Article
author Phyu, W.K.
Ong, Kien Chai
Kong, C.K.
Khalil, A.A.
Ramanujam, T.M.
Wong, Kum Thong
author_facet Phyu, W.K.
Ong, Kien Chai
Kong, C.K.
Khalil, A.A.
Ramanujam, T.M.
Wong, Kum Thong
author_sort Phyu, W.K.
title Squamous epitheliotropism of Enterovirus A71 in human epidermis and oral mucosa
title_short Squamous epitheliotropism of Enterovirus A71 in human epidermis and oral mucosa
title_full Squamous epitheliotropism of Enterovirus A71 in human epidermis and oral mucosa
title_fullStr Squamous epitheliotropism of Enterovirus A71 in human epidermis and oral mucosa
title_full_unstemmed Squamous epitheliotropism of Enterovirus A71 in human epidermis and oral mucosa
title_sort squamous epitheliotropism of enterovirus a71 in human epidermis and oral mucosa
publisher Nature Publishing Group
publishDate 2017
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/19061/1/Squamous_epitheliotropism_of_Enterovirus_A71_in_human_epidermis_and_oral_mucosa.pdf
http://eprints.um.edu.my/19061/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/srep45069
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