Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.1128/mSphere.00528-19
Title: Antibody-dependent dengue virus entry modulates cell intrinsic responses for enhanced infection
Authors: Chan, C.Y.Y.
Heng Low, J.Z.
Gan, E.S.
Ong, E.Z.
Zhang, S.L.-X.
Tan, H.C.
Chai, X.
Ghosh, S.
Ooi, E.E. 
Chan, K.R.
Keywords: Dengue virus
Host response
Virus-host interactions
Issue Date: 2019
Publisher: American Society for Microbiology
Citation: Chan, C.Y.Y., Heng Low, J.Z., Gan, E.S., Ong, E.Z., Zhang, S.L.-X., Tan, H.C., Chai, X., Ghosh, S., Ooi, E.E., Chan, K.R. (2019). Antibody-dependent dengue virus entry modulates cell intrinsic responses for enhanced infection. mSphere 4 (5) : e00528-19. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1128/mSphere.00528-19
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
Abstract: Dengue is caused by infection with any one of four dengue viruses (DENV); the risk of severe disease appears to be enhanced by the cross-reactive or subneutralizing levels of antibody from a prior DENV infection. These antibodies opsonize DENV entry through the activating Fc gamma receptors (Fc?R), instead of infection through canonical receptor-mediated endocytosis, to result in higher levels of DENV replication. However, whether the enhanced replication is solely due to more efficient Fc?R-mediated DENV entry or is also through Fc?R-mediated alteration of the host transcriptome response to favor DENV infection remains unclear. Indeed, more efficient viral entry through activation of the Fc?R can result in an increased viral antigenic load within target cells and confound direct comparisons of the host transcriptome response under antibody-dependent and antibody-independent conditions. Herein, we show that, despite controlling for the viral antigenic load in primary monocytes, the antibody-dependent and non-antibody-dependent routes of DENV entry induce transcriptome responses that are remarkably different. Notably, antibodydependent DENV entry upregulated DENV host dependency factors associated with RNA splicing, mitochondrial respiratory chain complexes, and vesicle trafficking. Additionally, supporting findings from other studies, antibody-dependent DENV entry impeded the downregulation of ribosomal genes caused by canonical receptor-mediated endocytosis to increase viral translation. Collectively, our findings support the notion that antibodydependent DENV entry alters host responses that support the viral life cycle and that host responses to DENV need to be defined in the context of its entry pathway. © 2019 Chan et al.
Source Title: mSphere
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/206398
ISSN: 2379-5042
DOI: 10.1128/mSphere.00528-19
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
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