Abstract
BackgroundWhen mosquitoes infected with DENV are feeding, the proboscis must traverse the epidermis several times (“probing”) before reaching a blood vessel in the dermis. During this process, the salivary glands release the virus, which is likely to interact first with cells of the various epidermal and dermal layers, cells which could be physiologically relevant to DENV infection and replication in humans. However, important questions are whether more abundant non-hematopoietic cells such as fibroblasts become infected, and whether they play any role in antiviral innate immunity in the very early stages of infection, or even if they might be used by DENV as primary replication cells.Methodology/Principal FindingsFibroblasts freshly released from healthy skin and infected 12 hours after their isolation show a positive signal for DENV. In addition, when primary skin fibroblast cultures were established and subsequently infected, we showed DENV-2 antigen-positive intracellular signal at 24 hours and 48 hours post-infection. Moreover, the fibroblasts showed productive infection in a conventional plaque assay. The skin fibroblasts infected with DENV-2 underwent potent signaling through both TLR3 and RIG- 1, but not Mda5, triggering up-regulation of IFNβ, TNFα, defensin 5 (HB5) and β defensin 2 (HβD2). In addition, DENV infected fibroblasts showed increased nuclear translocation of interferon (IFN) regulatory factor 3 (IRF3), but not interferon regulatory factor 7 (IRF7), when compared with mock-infected fibroblasts.Conclusions/SignificanceIn this work, we demonstrated the high susceptibility to DENV infection by primary fibroblasts from normal human skin, both in situ and in vitro. Our results suggest that these cells may contribute to the pro-inflammatory and anti-viral microenvironment in the early stages of interaction with DENV-2. Furthermore, the data suggest that fibroblast may also be used as a primary site of DENV replication and provide viral particles that may contribute to subsequent viral dissemination.
Highlights
Dengue virus (DENV) has become one of the most important arthropod-borne viral infections of humans, with approximately 100 million cases per year
We demonstrate that that both human whole skin and freshly isolated skin fibroblasts are productively infected with Dengue virus (DENV)
The skin fibroblasts infected with DENV-2 underwent signaling through both TLR3 and RIG-1, but not melanoma differentiation-associated gene 5 (Mda5), triggering up-regulation of IFNb, TNFa, defensin 5 (HB5) and b defensin 2 (HbD2)
Summary
Dengue virus (DENV) has become one of the most important arthropod-borne viral infections of humans, with approximately 100 million cases per year. Much work has been devoted to understanding the adaptive immune response to DENV, but not enough information has been raised about the very early steps of interaction with the host [4,5,6]. When mosquitoes infected with DENV are feeding, the proboscis must traverse the epidermis several times (‘‘probing’’) before reaching a blood vessel in the dermis. During this process, the salivary glands release the virus, which is likely to interact first with cells of the various epidermal and dermal layers, cells which could be physiologically relevant to DENV infection and replication in humans. Important questions are whether more abundant non-hematopoietic cells such as fibroblasts become infected, and whether they play any role in antiviral innate immunity in the very early stages of infection, or even if they might be used by DENV as primary replication cells
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