Both CXCR3 and CXCL10/IFN-Inducible Protein 10 Are Required for Resistance to Primary Infection by Dengue Virus

  • Hsieh M
  • Lai S
  • Chen J
  • et al.
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Abstract

We examined the extent to which CXCR3 mediates resistance to dengue infection. Following intracerebral infection with dengue virus, CXCR3-deficient (CXCR3−/−) mice showed significantly higher mortality rates than wild-type (WT) mice; moreover, surviving CXCR3−/− mice, but not WT mice, often developed severe hind-limb paralysis. The brains of CXCR3−/− mice showed higher viral loads than those of WT mice, and quantitative analysis using real-time PCR, flow cytometry, and immunohistochemistry revealed fewer T cells, CD8+ T cells in particular, in the brains of CXCR3−/− mice. This suggests that recruitment of effector T cells to sites of dengue infection was diminished in CXCR3−/− mice, which impaired elimination of the virus from the brain and thus increased the likelihood of paralysis and/or death. These results indicate that CXCR3 plays a protective rather than an immunopathological role in dengue virus infection. In studies to identify critical CXCR3 ligands, CXCL10/IFN-inducible protein 10-deficient (CXCL10/IP-10−/−) mice infected with dengue virus showed a higher mortality rate than that of the CXCR3−/− mice. Although CXCL10/IP-10, CXCL9/monokine induced by IFN-γ, and CXCL11/IFN-inducible T cell α chemoattractant share a single receptor and all three of these chemokines are induced by dengue virus infection, the latter two could not compensate for the absence of CXCL10/IP-10 in this in vivo model. Our results suggest that both CXCR3 and CXCL10/IP-10 contribute to resistance against primary dengue virus infection and that chemokines that are indistinguishable in in vitro assays differ in their activities in vivo.

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APA

Hsieh, M.-F., Lai, S.-L., Chen, J.-P., Sung, J.-M., Lin, Y.-L., Wu-Hsieh, B. A., … Liao, F. (2006). Both CXCR3 and CXCL10/IFN-Inducible Protein 10 Are Required for Resistance to Primary Infection by Dengue Virus. The Journal of Immunology, 177(3), 1855–1863. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.177.3.1855

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