Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.1155/2017/3164375
Title: Molecular Responses of Human Retinal Cells to Infection with Dengue Virus
Authors: Carr, J.M
Ashander, L.M
Calvert, J.K
Ma, Y
Aloia, A
Bracho, G.G
Chee, S.-P 
Appukuttan, B
Smith, J.R
Keywords: actin
antivirus agent
beta catenin
catenin beta 1
interferon
protein ZO1
unclassified drug
vascular adhesion protein 1
Article
cell function
cytopathogenic effect
dengue
Dengue virus
Dengue virus 2
gene overexpression
human
human cell
macular edema
protein expression
retina cell
retinopathy
virus replication
cell culture
cell line
cytology
Dengue virus
endothelium cell
epithelium cell
immunohistochemistry
immunology
metabolism
pathogenicity
physiology
retina
tight junction
virology
Cell Line
Cells, Cultured
Dengue Virus
Endothelial Cells
Epithelial Cells
Humans
Immunohistochemistry
Retina
Tight Junctions
Virus Replication
Issue Date: 2017
Publisher: Hindawi Limited
Citation: Carr, J.M, Ashander, L.M, Calvert, J.K, Ma, Y, Aloia, A, Bracho, G.G, Chee, S.-P, Appukuttan, B, Smith, J.R (2017). Molecular Responses of Human Retinal Cells to Infection with Dengue Virus. Mediators of Inflammation 2017 : 3164375. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1155/2017/3164375
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
Abstract: Recent clinical reports indicate that infection with dengue virus (DENV) commonly has ocular manifestations. The most serious threat to vision is dengue retinopathy, including retinal vasculopathy and macular edema. Mechanisms of retinopathy are unstudied, but observations in patients implicate retinal pigment epithelial cells and retinal endothelial cells. Human retinal cells were inoculated with DENV-2 and monitored for up to 72 hours. Epithelial and endothelial cells supported DENV replication and release, but epithelial cells alone demonstrated clear cytopathic effect, and infection was more productive in those cells. Infection induced type I interferon responses from both cells, but this was stronger in epithelial cells. Endothelial cells increased expression of adhesion molecules, with sustained overexpression of vascular adhesion molecule-1. Transcellular impedance decreased for epithelial monolayers, but not endothelial monolayers, coinciding with cytopathic effect. This reduction was accompanied by disorganization of intracellular filamentous-actin and decreased expression of junctional molecules, zonula occludens 1, and catenin-?1. Changes in endothelial expression of adhesion molecules are consistent with the retinal vasculopathy seen in patients infected with DENV; decreases in epithelial junctional protein expression, paralleling loss of integrity of the epithelium, provide a molecular basis for DENV-associated macular edema. These molecular processes present potential therapeutic targets for vision-threatening dengue retinopathy. © 2017 Jillian M. Carr et al.
Source Title: Mediators of Inflammation
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/179251
ISSN: 0962-9351
DOI: 10.1155/2017/3164375
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
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