The natural history of CVB3 myocarditis in C57BL/6J mice: an extended in-depth characterization

Elsevier

Available online 14 May 2024, 107652

Cardiovascular PathologyAuthor links open overlay panel, , , , , , , , , , , , Highlights•

CVB3 inoculation of C57BL/6J mice induces acute self-limiting viral myocarditis.

Male sex is associated with higher mortality, cardiac inflammation and fibrosis.

A 10-fold increase of the virus inoculation dose does not impact viral myocarditis outcomes in male mice.

Tbet- and iNOS-reactive cells are the dominant inflammatory cells in the subacute phase.

AbstractBackground and aims

Viral infections are the leading cause of myocarditis. Besides acute cardiac complications, late-stage sequelae such as myocardial fibrosis may develop, importantly impacting the prognosis. Coxsackievirus B3 (CVB)-induced myocarditis in mice is the most commonly used translational model to study viral myocarditis and has provided the majority of our current understanding of the disease pathophysiology. Nevertheless, the late stages of disease, encompassing fibrogenesis and arrhythmogenesis, have been underappreciated in viral myocarditis research to date. The present study investigated the natural history of CVB-induced myocarditis in C57BL/6J mice, expanding the focus beyond the acute phase of disease. In addition, we studied the impact of sex and inoculation dose on the disease course.

Methods and results

C57BL/6J mice (12 weeks old; n=154) received a single intraperitoneal injection with CVB to induce viral myocarditis, or vehicle (PBS) as control. Male mice (n=92) were injected with 5 × 105 (regular dose)(RD) or 5 × 106 (high dose)(HD) plaque-forming units of CVB, whereas female mice received the RD only. Animals were sacrificed 1, 2, 4, 8 and 11 weeks after CVB or PBS injection. Virally inoculated mice developed viral disease with a temporary decline in general condition and weight loss, which was less pronounced in female animals (P<0.001). In male CVB mice, premature mortality occurred between days 8-23 after inoculation (RD: 21%, HD: 20%), whereas all female animals survived. Over the course of disease, cardiac inflammation progressively subsided, with faster resolution in female mice. There were no substantial group differences in the composition of the inflammatory cell infiltrates: predominance of cytotoxic T cells at day 7 and 14, and a switch from arginase1-reactive macrophages to iNOS-reactive macrophages from day 7 to 14 were the main findings. There was concomitant development and maturation of different patterns of myocardial fibrosis, with enhanced fibrogenesis in male mice. Virus was almost completely cleared from the heart by day 14. Serum biomarkers of cardiac damage and cardiac expression of remodeling genes were temporarily elevated during the acute phase of disease. Cardiac CTGF gene upregulation was less prolonged in female CVB animals. In vivo electrophysiology studies at weeks 8 and 11 demonstrated that under baseline conditions (i.e. in the absence of proarrhythmogenic drugs), ventricular arrhythmias could only be induced in CVB animals. The cumulative arrhythmia burden throughout the entire stimulation protocol was not significantly different between CVB and control groups.

Conclusion

CVB inoculation in C57BL/6J mice represents a model of acute self-limiting viral myocarditis, with progression to different patterns of myocardial fibrosis. Sex, but not inoculation dose, seems to modulate the course of disease.

Keywords

Viral myocarditis

inflammation

myocardial fibrosis

natural course

characterization

histology

immunohistochemistry

fibrogenesis

mice

C57BL/6J

coxsackievirus B3

electrophysiology study

arrhythmogenesis

troponin

cytokine

remodeling

gene expression

© 2024 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Inc.

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