Dengue-2 and yellow fever 17DD viruses infect human dendritic cells, resulting in an induction of activation markers, cytokines and chemokines and secretion of different TNF-α and IFN-α profiles
Flaviviruses cause severe acute febrile and haemorrhagic infections, including dengue and yellow fever and the pathogenesis of these infections is caused by an exacerbated immune response. Dendritic cells (DCs) are targets for dengue virus (DENV) and yellow fever virus (YF) replication and are the f...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Memórias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz 2011-08, Vol.106 (5), p.594-605 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Flaviviruses cause severe acute febrile and haemorrhagic infections,
including dengue and yellow fever and the pathogenesis of these
infections is caused by an exacerbated immune response. Dendritic cells
(DCs) are targets for dengue virus (DENV) and yellow fever virus (YF)
replication and are the first cell population to interact with these
viruses during a natural infection, which leads to an induction of
protective immunity in humans. We studied the infectivity of DENV2
(strain 16681), a YF vaccine (YF17DD) and a chimeric YF17D/DENV2
vaccine in monocyte-derived DCs in vitro with regard to cell
maturation, activation and cytokine production. Higher viral antigen
positive cell frequencies were observed for DENV2 when compared with
both vaccine viruses. Flavivirus-infected cultures exhibited dendritic
cell activation and maturation molecules. CD38 expression on DCs was
enhanced for both DENV2 and YF17DD, whereas OX40L expression was
decreased as compared to mock-stimulated cells, suggesting that a T
helper 1 profile is favoured. Tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-α
production in cell cultures was significantly higher in DENV2-infected
cultures than in cultures infected with YF17DD or YF17D/DENV. In
contrast, the vaccines induced higher IFN-α levels than DENV2. The
differential cytokine production indicates that DENV2 results in TNF
induction, which discriminates it from vaccine viruses that
preferentially stimulate interferon expression. These differential
response profiles may influence the pathogenic infection outcome. |
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ISSN: | 1678-8060 0074-0276 1678-8060 0074-0276 |
DOI: | 10.1590/S0074-02762011000500012 |