The major role of endothelial cells is to maintain homeostasis of vascular permeability and to preserve the integrity of vascular vessels to prevent fluid leakage. Properly functioning endothelial cells promote physiological balance and stability for blood circulation and fluid components. A monolayer of endothelial cells has the ability to regulate paracellular and transcellular pathways for transport proteins, solutes, and fluid. In addition to the paracellular pathway, the transcellular pathway is another route of endothelial permeability that mediates vascular permeability under physiologic conditions. The transcellular pathway was found to be associated with an assortment of disease pathogeneses. The clinical manifestation of severe dengue infection in humans is vascular leakage and hemorrhagic diatheses. This review explores and describes the transcellular pathway, which is an alternate route of vascular permeability during dengue infection that corresponds with the pathologic finding of intact tight junction. This pathway may be the route of albumin transport that causes endothelial dysfunction during dengue virus infection.
The clinical sign of dengue hemorrhagic fever (DHF) and dengue shock syndrome (DSS) in humans is increased vascular permeability. Virus‐specific factors and host factors, including secreted cytokines and especially TNF‐α, are suggested as having roles in the pathogenesis of these conditions. Proteomic analysis with MS is performed in membrane fraction isolated from human endothelial cells (EA.hy926) upon DENV infection and TNF‐α treatment. In the 451 altered proteins that are identified, decreased plectin expression is revealed by Western blot analysis, while immunofluorescence staining (IFA) shows actin stress fiber rearrangement and decreased VE‐cadherin in treated EA.hy926 cells. In vitro vascular permeability assay was used to determine transepithelial electrical resistance (TEER) in EA.hy926 cells seeded on collagen‐coated Transwell inserts. The low level of TEER, the low expression of plectin and VE‐cadherin, and the unusual organization of actin stress fiber are found to be correlated with increased membrane permeability in DENV2 and TNF‐α‐treated EA.hy926 cells. Similar results are observed when using siRNA knockdown plectin in mock EA.hy926 cells. This study provides better understanding of the role that disruption of cytoskeleton linker protein plays in increased vascular permeability, and suggests these factors as major contributors to vascular leakage in DHF/DSS patients.
One of several mechanisms that leads to the development of dengue hemorrhagic fever (DHF) and dengue shock syndrome (DSS) is called antibody-dependent enhancement (ADE). Monocytes can be infected by the ADE phenomenon, which occurs in dengue secondary infection. This study aimed to investigate the proteins involved in ADE of DENV infection in the human monocytic cell line U937. The phosphoproteins were used to perform and analyze for protein expression using mass spectrometry (GeLC-MS/MS). The differential phosphoproteins revealed 1131 altered proteins compared between isotype- and DENV-specific antibody-treated monocytes. The altered proteins revealed 558 upregulated proteins and 573 downregulated proteins. Protein disulfide isomerase (PDI), which is an enzyme that had a high-ranking fold change and that catalyzes the formation, breakage, and rearrangement of disulfide bonds within a protein molecule, was selected for further study. PDI was found to be important for dengue virus infectivity during the ADE model. The effect of PDI inhibition was also shown to be involved in the early stage of life cycle by time-of-drug-addition assay. These results suggest that PDI is important for protein translation and virion assembly of dengue virus during infection in human monocytes, and it may play a significant role as a chaperone to stabilize dengue protein synthesis.
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