Virus Details


VHFID1926

Pathogen Information

Virus Name Dengue virus 2
Virus Short Name DENV 2
Order Unassigned
Virus Family Flaviviridae
Virus Subfamily N.A.
Genus Flavivirus
Species Dengue virus
Host Human, mammals, mosquitoes and ticks
Cell Tropism Phagocytes, hepatocytes
Associated Disease Dengue fever
Mode of Transmission Arthropod bite, mainly mosquitoes
VIPR DB link http://www.viprbrc.org/brc/home.spg?decorator=flavi
ICTV DB link https://talk.ictvonline.org/ictv-reports/ictv_online_report/positive-sense-rna-viruses/w/flaviviridae
Virus Host DB link http://www.genome.jp/virushostdb/view/?virus_lineage=Flaviviridae

Publication Information

Paper Title Essential role of platelet-activating factor receptor in the pathogenesis of Dengue virus infection
Author's Name Danielle G. Souzaa, Caio T. Fagundesa, Lirlandia P. Sousaa, Flavio A. Amarala, Rafael S. Souzaa, Adriano L. Souzaa, Erna G. Kroonb, Daniela Sachsa, Fernando Q. Cunhac, Eugenij Bukind, Alena Atrasheuskayad, George Ignatyeve, and Mauro M. Teixeira
Journal Name PNAS
Pubmed ID 19666557
Abstract Severe dengue infection in humans causes a disease characterized by thrombocytopenia, increased levels of cytokines, increased vascular permeability, hemorrhage, and shock. Treatment is supportive. Activation of platelet-activating factor (PAF) receptor (PAFR) on endothelial cells and leukocytes induces increase in vascular permeability, hypotension, and production of cytokines. We hypothesized that activation of PAFR could account for the major systemic manifestations of dengue infection. Inoculation of adult mice with an adapted strain of Dengue virus caused a systemic disease, with several features of the infection in humans. In PAFR(-/-) mice, there was decreased thrombocytopenia, hemoconcentration, decreased systemic levels of cytokines, and delay of lethality, when compared with WT infected mice. Treatment with UK-74,505, an orally active PAFR antagonist, prevented the above-mentioned manifestations, as well as hypotension and increased vascular permeability, and decreased lethality, even when started 5 days after virus inoculation. Similar results were obtained with a distinct PAFR antagonist, PCA-4246. Despite decreased disease manifestation, viral loads were similar (PAFR(-/-)) or lower (PAFR antagonist) than in WT mice. Thus, activation of PAFR plays a major role in the pathogenesis of experimental dengue infection, and its blockade prevents more severe disease manifestation after infection with no increase in systemic viral titers, suggesting that there is no interference in the ability of the murine host to deal with the infection. PAFR antagonists are disease-modifying agents in experimental dengue infection.
Used Model LLC-MK2 cells
DOI 10.1073/pnas.0906467106