23 Transgenic Mouse for the Study of Poliovirus Pathogenicity
Abstract
In the 1950s, an outline of the pathology of poliomyelitis was established. According to this outline (Bodian 1955; Sabin 1956), poliovirus infection is initiated by ingestion of virus followed by its primary multiplication in the oropharynx and intestine (alimentary phase). Extensive viral multiplication is evident in tissues of the tonsils and Peyer’s patches of the ileum (lymphatic phase). From these sites, the virus moves into deep cervical and mesenteric lymph nodes, and then into the blood (viremic phase). Poliovirus invades the CNS through the blood-brain barrier or by the axonal pathway, and paralytic poliomyelitis occurs as a result of the destruction of neurons in the CNS, especially motor neurons in the anterior horn of the spinal cord and neurons of the motor cortex and the brain stem (neurological phase). Although many tissues are exposed to the virus during the viremic phase, sites of poliovirus replication are limited to certain tissues. Thus, poliovirus seems to have...
Full Text:
PDFDOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/0.463-480