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High Pro-Inflammatory Cytokine Secretion and Loss of High Avidity Cross-Reactive Cytotoxic T-Cells during the Course of Secondary Dengue Virus Infection

BACKGROUND: Dengue is one of the most important human diseases transmitted by an arthropod vector and the incidence of dengue virus infection has been increasing – over half the world's population now live in areas at risk of infection. Most infections are asymptomatic, but a subset of patients...

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Autores principales: Dong, Tao, Moran, Edward, Vinh Chau, Nguyen, Simmons, Cameron, Luhn, Kerstin, Peng, Yanchun, Wills, Bridget, Phuong Dung, Nguyen, Thi Thu Thao, Le, Hien, Tran Tinh, McMichael, Andrew, Farrar, Jeremy, Rowland-Jones, Sarah
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2092391/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18060049
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0001192
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author Dong, Tao
Moran, Edward
Vinh Chau, Nguyen
Simmons, Cameron
Luhn, Kerstin
Peng, Yanchun
Wills, Bridget
Phuong Dung, Nguyen
Thi Thu Thao, Le
Hien, Tran Tinh
McMichael, Andrew
Farrar, Jeremy
Rowland-Jones, Sarah
author_facet Dong, Tao
Moran, Edward
Vinh Chau, Nguyen
Simmons, Cameron
Luhn, Kerstin
Peng, Yanchun
Wills, Bridget
Phuong Dung, Nguyen
Thi Thu Thao, Le
Hien, Tran Tinh
McMichael, Andrew
Farrar, Jeremy
Rowland-Jones, Sarah
author_sort Dong, Tao
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Dengue is one of the most important human diseases transmitted by an arthropod vector and the incidence of dengue virus infection has been increasing – over half the world's population now live in areas at risk of infection. Most infections are asymptomatic, but a subset of patients experience a potentially fatal shock syndrome characterised by plasma leakage. Severe forms of dengue are epidemiologically associated with repeated infection by more than one of the four dengue virus serotypes. Generally attributed to the phenomenon of antibody-dependent enhancement, recent observations indicate that T-cells may also influence disease phenotype. METHODS AND FINDINGS: Virus-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) showing high level cross reactivity between dengue serotypes could be expanded from blood samples taken during the acute phase of secondary dengue infection. These could not be detected in convalescence when only CTL populations demonstrating significant serotype specificity were identified. Dengue cross-reactive CTL clones derived from these patients were of higher avidity than serotype-specific clones and produced much higher levels of both type 1 and certain type 2 cytokines, many previously implicated in dengue pathogenesis. CONCLUSION: Dengue serotype cross-reactive CTL clones showing high avidity for antigen produce higher levels of inflammatory cytokines than serotype-specific clones. That such cells cannot be expanded from convalescent samples suggests that they may be depleted, perhaps as a consequence of activation-induced cell death. Such high avidity cross-reactive memory CTL may produce inflammatory cytokines during the course of secondary infection, contributing to the pathogenesis of vascular leak. These cells appear to be subsequently deleted leaving a more serotype-specific memory CTL pool. Further studies are needed to relate these cellular observations to disease phenotype in a large group of patients. If confirmed they have significant implications for understanding the role of virus-specific CTL in pathogenesis of dengue disease.
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spelling pubmed-20923912007-12-05 High Pro-Inflammatory Cytokine Secretion and Loss of High Avidity Cross-Reactive Cytotoxic T-Cells during the Course of Secondary Dengue Virus Infection Dong, Tao Moran, Edward Vinh Chau, Nguyen Simmons, Cameron Luhn, Kerstin Peng, Yanchun Wills, Bridget Phuong Dung, Nguyen Thi Thu Thao, Le Hien, Tran Tinh McMichael, Andrew Farrar, Jeremy Rowland-Jones, Sarah PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Dengue is one of the most important human diseases transmitted by an arthropod vector and the incidence of dengue virus infection has been increasing – over half the world's population now live in areas at risk of infection. Most infections are asymptomatic, but a subset of patients experience a potentially fatal shock syndrome characterised by plasma leakage. Severe forms of dengue are epidemiologically associated with repeated infection by more than one of the four dengue virus serotypes. Generally attributed to the phenomenon of antibody-dependent enhancement, recent observations indicate that T-cells may also influence disease phenotype. METHODS AND FINDINGS: Virus-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) showing high level cross reactivity between dengue serotypes could be expanded from blood samples taken during the acute phase of secondary dengue infection. These could not be detected in convalescence when only CTL populations demonstrating significant serotype specificity were identified. Dengue cross-reactive CTL clones derived from these patients were of higher avidity than serotype-specific clones and produced much higher levels of both type 1 and certain type 2 cytokines, many previously implicated in dengue pathogenesis. CONCLUSION: Dengue serotype cross-reactive CTL clones showing high avidity for antigen produce higher levels of inflammatory cytokines than serotype-specific clones. That such cells cannot be expanded from convalescent samples suggests that they may be depleted, perhaps as a consequence of activation-induced cell death. Such high avidity cross-reactive memory CTL may produce inflammatory cytokines during the course of secondary infection, contributing to the pathogenesis of vascular leak. These cells appear to be subsequently deleted leaving a more serotype-specific memory CTL pool. Further studies are needed to relate these cellular observations to disease phenotype in a large group of patients. If confirmed they have significant implications for understanding the role of virus-specific CTL in pathogenesis of dengue disease. Public Library of Science 2007-12-05 /pmc/articles/PMC2092391/ /pubmed/18060049 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0001192 Text en Dong et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Dong, Tao
Moran, Edward
Vinh Chau, Nguyen
Simmons, Cameron
Luhn, Kerstin
Peng, Yanchun
Wills, Bridget
Phuong Dung, Nguyen
Thi Thu Thao, Le
Hien, Tran Tinh
McMichael, Andrew
Farrar, Jeremy
Rowland-Jones, Sarah
High Pro-Inflammatory Cytokine Secretion and Loss of High Avidity Cross-Reactive Cytotoxic T-Cells during the Course of Secondary Dengue Virus Infection
title High Pro-Inflammatory Cytokine Secretion and Loss of High Avidity Cross-Reactive Cytotoxic T-Cells during the Course of Secondary Dengue Virus Infection
title_full High Pro-Inflammatory Cytokine Secretion and Loss of High Avidity Cross-Reactive Cytotoxic T-Cells during the Course of Secondary Dengue Virus Infection
title_fullStr High Pro-Inflammatory Cytokine Secretion and Loss of High Avidity Cross-Reactive Cytotoxic T-Cells during the Course of Secondary Dengue Virus Infection
title_full_unstemmed High Pro-Inflammatory Cytokine Secretion and Loss of High Avidity Cross-Reactive Cytotoxic T-Cells during the Course of Secondary Dengue Virus Infection
title_short High Pro-Inflammatory Cytokine Secretion and Loss of High Avidity Cross-Reactive Cytotoxic T-Cells during the Course of Secondary Dengue Virus Infection
title_sort high pro-inflammatory cytokine secretion and loss of high avidity cross-reactive cytotoxic t-cells during the course of secondary dengue virus infection
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2092391/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18060049
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0001192
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