Abstract

Mitochondria dysfunction may be an important contributor to Japanese encephalitis (JE) viral infection disease pathogenesis. In the current study, we define whether changes in mitochondrial DNA copy number (which is the biomarker for mitochondrial function) and alteration in mitochondria dynamics (fusion and fission) contribute to the pathology of the JE virus in vivo mice model. We found decreased mitochondria copy number, reduced activation of mitochondrial fission (FIS1/DRP1), and increased activation of mitochondrial fusion (MFN1/MFN2/OPA1) genes that are associated with increased NOX2-mediated ROS generation and neuronal cell death following JE virus infection. Furthermore, we found that antioxidant glutathione level decreases. In summary, the following study demonstrates that JE viral infection causes an imbalance in mitochondrial fission/fusion gene activation and promotes NOX2-mediated oxidative stress and cell death, suggesting that intervention in mitochondrial dynamics might be a potential therapeutic strategy for combating oxidative stress and inflammatory process in JE viral infection.

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