Aerosol Inoculation with a Sub-lethal Influenza Virus Leads to Exacerbated Morbidity and Pulmonary Disease Pathogenesis

Abstract
A mouse model has been extensively used to investigate disease intervention approaches and correlates of immunity following influenza virus infection. The majority of studies examining cross-reactive and protective immune responses have used intranasal (IN) virus inoculation; however, infectious aerosols are a common means of transmitting influenza in the human population. In this study, IN and aerosol routes of inoculation were compared and end-points of immunity and disease pathogenesis were evaluated in mice using mouse-adapted H3N2 A/Aichi/2/68 (x31). Aerosol inoculation with sub-lethal x31 levels caused more robust infection, which was characterized by enhanced morbidity, mortality, pulmonary cell infiltration, and inflammation, compared to IN-inoculated mice, as well as higher levels of IL-6 expression in the lung. Treatment with IL-6-blocking antibodies reduced pulmonary infiltrates and lung pathology in aerosol-inoculated mice. This study shows that aerosol inoculation results in a distinctive host response and disease outcome compared to IN inoculation, and suggests a possible role for IL-6 in lung pathogenesis.