4.7 Article

Dengue virus binding and replication by platelets

Journal

BLOOD
Volume 126, Issue 3, Pages 378-385

Publisher

AMER SOC HEMATOLOGY
DOI: 10.1182/blood-2014-09-598029

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Funding

  1. Canadian Blood Services
  2. Canadian Institutes of Health Research [273985]

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Dengue virus (DENV) infection causes similar to 200 million cases of severe flulike illness annually, escalating to life-threatening hemorrhagic fever or shock syndrome in similar to 500 000. Although thrombocytopenia is typical of both mild and severe diseases, the mechanism triggering platelet reduction is incompletely understood. As a probable initiating event, direct purified DENV-platelet binding was followed in the current study by quantitative reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction and confirmed antigenically. Approximately 800 viruses specifically bound per platelet at 37 degrees C. Fewer sites were observed at 25 degrees C, the blood bank storage temperature (similar to 350 sites), or 4 degrees C, known to attenuate virus cell entry (similar to 200 sites). Dendritic cell-specific intercellular adhesion molecule-3-grabbing nonintegrin (DC-SIGN) and heparan sulfate proteoglycan were implicated as coreceptors because only the combination of anti-DC-SIGN and low-molecular-weight heparin prevented binding. Interestingly, at 37 degrees C and 25 degrees C, platelets replicated the positive sense single-stranded RNA genome of DENV by up to similar to 4-fold over 7 days. Further time course experiments demonstrated production of viral NS1 protein, which is known to be highly antigenic in patient serum. The infectivity of DENV intrinsically decayed in vitro, which was moderated by platelet-mediated generation of viable progeny. This was shown using a transcription inhibitor and confirmed by freeze-denatured platelets being incapable of replicating the DENV genome. For the first time, these data demonstrate that platelets directly bind DENV saturably and produce infectious virus. Thus, expression of antigen encoded by DENV is a novel consideration in the pathogen-induced thrombocytopenia mechanism. These results furthermore draw attention to the possibility that platelets may produce permissive RNA viruses in addition to DENV.

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