4.7 Article

Hyperglycemia exacerbates dengue virus infection by facilitating poly(A)-binding protein-mediated viral translation

Journal

JCI INSIGHT
Volume 7, Issue 21, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC CLINICAL INVESTIGATION INC
DOI: 10.1172/jci.insight.142805

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Ministry of Science and Technology [MOST109-2327-B-006-010, 110-2327-B-006-005, 110-2320-B-038-064-MY3]
  2. intramural funding, Taipei, Taiwan [106TMU-CIT-01-2]

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Diabetes is associated with increased risk of severe dengue diseases, and hyperglycemic environment facilitates dengue virus replication and transmission through PABP-mediated viral translation.
Diabetes mellitus (DM) is highly comorbid with severe dengue diseases; however, the underlying mechanisms are unclear. Patients with DM have a 1.61-fold increased risk of developing dengue hemorrhagic fever. In search of host factors involved in dengue virus (DENV) infection, we used high-glucose (HG) treatment and showed that HG increased viral protein expression and virion release but had no effects on the early stages of viral infection. After HG stimulation, DENV-firefly luciferase-transfected assay and cellular replicon-based assay indicated increased viral translation, whereas using the glucose uptake inhibitor phloretin blocked this effect. HG treatment increased the translational factor poly(A)-binding protein (PABP) in a glucose transporter-associated, PI3K/ AKT-regulated manner. Silencing PABP significantly decreased HG-prompted virion production. HG enhanced the formation of the PABP-eukaryotic translation initiation factor 4G complex, which is regulated by protein-disulfide isomerase. Hyperglycemia increased PABP expression, mortality rate, viral protein expression, and viral loads in streptozotocin-induced DM mice. Overall, hyperglycemic stress facilitates DENV infection by strengthening PABP-mediated viral translation.

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