Abstract

Treatment of a mouse macrophage cell line Mk1 with pokeweed mitogen (PWM) either before or during but not after virus inoculation resulted in an enhancement of dengue virus (DV) infection. The infection enhancement was primarily due to an increase in the number of DV-infected cells but not to increased virus production in a cell. These results suggested that PWM treatment mediated increased DV binding and/or penetration to Mk1 cells, thereby resulting in the infection enhancement. N-acetylglucosamine (GlucNAc) did not suppress PWM-mediated enhancement of DV infection when added to Mk1 cells after PWM treatment was done, although GlucNAc clearly suppressed the effect of PWM when added simultaneously with PWM. The results implied the possibility that the PWM-mediated increase in viral binding/penetration was not due to a cross-linking by PWM between DV and a cell-surface receptor, but due to another mechanism, presumably exposure of a masked DV receptor(s). The DV receptor, unidentified as yet, involved in the PWM-mediated infection enhancement appeared to have no relation with IgG Fc receptors that are known to be involved in antibody-mediated enhancement of DV infection.

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