4.6 Article

Dengue Virus Infection of Human Retinal Muller Glial Cells

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VIRUSES-BASEL
卷 15, 期 7, 页码 -

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MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/v15071410

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dengue virus; human; retina; Muller cell; retinopathy

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Retinopathy is a recognized complication of dengue, affecting hospitalized patients up to 10%. This study aimed to investigate the susceptibility of Muller cells to dengue virus (DENV) infection and their antiviral, inflammatory, and immunomodulatory responses in vitro. It was found that Muller cells can be infected by DENV and mount an immune response, but the response varies across different cell isolates and DENV strains. This research provides insights into the role of retinal Muller glial cells in dengue retinopathy.
Retinopathy is a recently recognized complication of dengue, affecting up to 10% of hospitalized patients. Research on the pathogenesis has focused largely on effects of dengue virus (DENV) at the blood-retinal barrier. Involvement of retinal Muller glial cells has received little attention, although this cell population contributes to the pathology of other intraocular infections. The goal of our work was to establish the susceptibility of Muller cells to infection with DENV and to identify characteristics of the cellular antiviral, inflammatory, and immunomodulatory responses to DENV infection in vitro. Primary human Muller cell isolates and the MIO-M1 human Muller cell line were infected with the laboratory-adapted Mon601 strain and DENV serotype 1 and 2 field isolates, and cell-DENV interactions were investigated by immunolabelling and quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction. Muller cells were susceptible to DENV infection, but experiments involving primary cell isolates indicated inter-individual variation. Viral infection induced an inflammatory response (including tumour necrosis factor-& alpha;, interleukin [IL]-1 & beta;, and IL-6) and an immunomodulatory response (including programmed death-ligand [PD-L]1 and PD-L2). The type I interferon response was muted in the Muller cell line compared to primary cell isolates. The highest infectivity and cell responses were observed in the laboratory-adapted strain, and overall, infectivity and cell responses were stronger in DENV2 strains. This work demonstrates that Muller cells mount an antiviral and immune response to DENV infection, and that this response varies across cell isolates and DENV strain. The research provides a direction for future efforts to understand the role of human retinal Muller glial cells in dengue retinopathy.

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