Autophagy-associated dengue vesicles promote viral transmission avoiding antibody neutralization

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Abstract

One of the major defense mechanisms against virus spread in vivo is the blocking of viral infectibility by neutralizing antibodies. We describe here the identification of infectious autophagy-associated dengue vesicles released from infected cells. These vesicles contain viral proteins E, NS1, prM/M, and viral RNA, as well as host lipid droplets and LC3-II, an autophagy marker. The viral RNA can be protected within the autophagic organelles since anti-dengue neutralizing antibodies do not have an effect on the vesicle-mediated transmission that is able to initiate a new round of infection in target cells. Importantly, such infectious vesicles were also detected in a patient serum. Our study suggests that autophagy machinery plays a new role in dengue virus transmission. This discovery explains the inefficiency of neutralizing antibody upon dengue infection as a potential immune evasion mechanism in vivo.

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Wu, Y. W., Mettling, C., Wu, S. R., Yu, C. Y., Perng, G. C., Lin, Y. S., & Lin, Y. L. (2016). Autophagy-associated dengue vesicles promote viral transmission avoiding antibody neutralization. Scientific Reports, 6. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep32243

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