4.7 Article

Ultrastructural, Immunofluorescence, and RNA Evidence Support the Hypothesis of a New Virus Associated With Kawasaki Disease

Journal

JOURNAL OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Volume 203, Issue 7, Pages 1021-1030

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/infdis/jiq136

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01 HL63771, R21 HL089526]
  2. Max Goldenberg Foundation
  3. Children's Memorial Hospital

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Background. Intracytoplasmic inclusion bodies (ICI) have been identified in ciliated bronchial epithelium of Kawasaki disease (KD) patients using a synthetic antibody derived from acute KD arterial IgA plasma cells; ICI may derive from the KD etiologic agent. Methods. Acute KD bronchial epithelium was subjected to immunofluorescence for ICI and cytokeratin, high-throughput sequencing, and transmission electron microscopy (TEM). Interferon pathway gene expression profiling was performed on KD lung. Results. An intermediate filament cytokeratin cage was not observed around KD ICI, making it unlikely that ICI are overproduced or misfolded human protein aggregates. Many interferon-stimulated genes were detected in the bronchial epithelium, and significant modulation of the interferon response pathway was observed in the lung tissue of KD patients. No known virus was identified by sequencing. Aggregates of virus-like particles (VLP) were detected by TEM in all 3 acute KD patients from whom nonembedded formalin-fixed lung tissue was available. Conclusions. KD ICI are most likely virus induced; bronchial cells with ICI contain VLP that share morphologic features among several different RNA viral families. Expedited autopsies and tissue fixation from acute KD fatalities are urgently needed to more clearly ascertain the VLP. These findings are compatible with the hypothesis that the infectious etiologic agent of KD may be a new RNA virus.

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