Lee Pei Xuan, Ong Li Ching, Libau Eshele Anak, Alonso Sylvie
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine, National University of Singapore, Singapore.
Immunology Programme, Life Sciences Institute, National University of Singapore, Singapore.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2016 Jun 24;10(6):e0004805. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0004805. eCollection 2016 Jun.
Dengue virus (DENV) causes a spectrum of diseases ranging from self-limiting dengue fever to severe conditions such as haemorrhagic fever and dengue shock syndrome. Antibody-dependent enhancement (ADE) is thought to explain the occurrence of severe dengue whereby pre-existing binding but non-neutralising antibodies enhance DENV infection. The ADE phenomenon is supported by epidemiological findings that infants that born to dengue immune mothers are at greater risk to develop severe dengue upon primary infection. The role of maternally acquired dengue-specific antibodies in disease enhancement was recently recapitulated in a mouse model where mice born to DENV1-immune mothers experienced enhanced disease severity upon DENV2 infection. Here, this study investigates the relative contribution of maternal dengue-specific antibodies acquired during gestation and breastfeeding in dengue disease. Using a surrogate breastfeeding mother experimental approach, we showed that majority of the maternal dengue-specific antibodies were acquired during breastfeeding and conferred an extended enhancement window. On the other hand, in the context of homologous infection, breastfeeding conferred protection. Furthermore, measurement of dengue-specific antibody titres over time in mice born to dengue immune mothers revealed a biphasic pattern of antibody decay as reported in humans. Our work provides evidence of the potential contribution of breast milk-acquired dengue-specific IgG antibodies in enhancement and protection against dengue. Should such contribution be established in humans as well, it may have important implications for the development of guidelines to dengue-immune breastfeeding mothers.
登革病毒(DENV)可引发一系列疾病,从自限性登革热到诸如出血热和登革休克综合征等严重病症。抗体依赖增强作用(ADE)被认为可以解释严重登革热的发生,即先前存在的具有结合能力但无中和作用的抗体可增强DENV感染。ADE现象得到了流行病学研究结果的支持,即感染过登革热的母亲所生的婴儿在初次感染时患严重登革热的风险更高。最近在一个小鼠模型中重现了母体获得的登革热特异性抗体在疾病加重方面的作用,在该模型中,感染过DENV1的母亲所生的小鼠在感染DENV2后疾病严重程度增加。在此,本研究调查了孕期和哺乳期获得的母体登革热特异性抗体在登革热疾病中的相对贡献。通过采用替代母乳喂养母亲的实验方法,我们发现大多数母体登革热特异性抗体是在哺乳期获得的,并赋予了更长的增强窗口期。另一方面,在同源感染的情况下,母乳喂养具有保护作用。此外,对感染过登革热的母亲所生小鼠体内登革热特异性抗体滴度随时间的测量显示,其抗体衰减模式呈双相,这与人类的情况一致。我们的研究为母乳中获得的登革热特异性IgG抗体在增强和预防登革热方面的潜在贡献提供了证据。如果在人类中也证实了这种贡献,那么这可能对制定针对感染过登革热的母乳喂养母亲的指导方针具有重要意义。