Department of Biochemical Sciences, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, University of Surrey, Guildford, Surrey, United Kingdom.
Department of Microbial Sciences, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, University of Surrey, Guildford, Surrey, United Kingdom.
mSphere. 2020 Aug 5;5(4):e00258-20. doi: 10.1128/mSphere.00258-20.
Dengue is the most prevalent arthropod-borne viral disease affecting humans, with severe dengue typified by potentially fatal microvascular leakage and hypovolemic shock. Blood vessels of the microvasculature are composed of a tubular structure of endothelial cells ensheathed by perivascular cells (pericytes). Pericytes support endothelial cell barrier formation and maintenance through paracrine and contact-mediated signaling and are critical to microvascular integrity. Pericyte dysfunction has been linked to vascular leakage in noncommunicable pathologies such as diabetic retinopathy but has never been linked to infection-related vascular leakage. Dengue vascular leakage has been shown to result in part from the direct action of the secreted dengue virus (DENV) nonstructural protein NS1 on endothelial cells. Using primary human vascular cells, we show here that NS1 also causes pericyte dysfunction and that NS1-induced endothelial hyperpermeability is more pronounced in the presence of pericytes. Notably, NS1 specifically disrupted the ability of pericytes to support endothelial cell function in a three-dimensional (3D) microvascular assay, with no effect on pericyte viability or physiology. These effects are mediated at least in part through contact-independent paracrine signals involved in endothelial barrier maintenance by pericytes. We therefore identify a role for pericytes in amplifying NS1-induced microvascular hyperpermeability in severe dengue and thus show that pericytes can play a critical role in the etiology of an infectious vascular leakage syndrome. These findings open new avenues of research for the development of drugs and diagnostic assays for combating infection-induced vascular leakage, such as severe dengue. The World Health Organization considers dengue one of the top 10 global public health problems. There is no specific antiviral therapy to treat dengue virus and no way of predicting which patients will develop potentially fatal severe dengue, typified by vascular leakage and circulatory shock. We show here that perivascular cells (pericytes) amplify the vascular leakage-inducing effects of the dengue viral protein NS1 through contact-independent signaling to endothelial cells. While pericytes are known to contribute to noncommunicable vascular leakage, this is the first time these cells have been implicated in the vascular effects of an infectious disease. Our findings could pave the way for new therapies and diagnostics to combat dengue and potentially other infectious vascular leakage syndromes.
登革热是最常见的虫媒病毒病,影响人类,重症登革热的特点是潜在致命的微血管渗漏和低血容量性休克。微血管的血管由内皮细胞的管状结构组成,内皮细胞被血管周细胞(周细胞)包围。周细胞通过旁分泌和接触介导的信号支持内皮细胞屏障的形成和维持,对微血管完整性至关重要。周细胞功能障碍与非传染性疾病(如糖尿病视网膜病变)中的血管渗漏有关,但从未与感染相关的血管渗漏有关。登革热血管渗漏部分是由分泌的登革病毒(DENV)非结构蛋白 NS1 直接作用于内皮细胞引起的。在这里,我们使用原代人血管细胞表明,NS1 也会导致周细胞功能障碍,并且在存在周细胞的情况下,NS1 诱导的内皮通透性增加更为明显。值得注意的是,NS1 特异性破坏了周细胞在三维(3D)微血管测定中支持内皮细胞功能的能力,对周细胞活力或生理学没有影响。这些作用至少部分通过旁分泌信号介导,这些信号涉及周细胞维持内皮屏障的接触非依赖性。因此,我们确定周细胞在放大 NS1 诱导的严重登革热微血管高通透性中起作用,从而表明周细胞在感染性血管渗漏综合征的发病机制中可以发挥关键作用。这些发现为开发针对严重登革热等感染性血管渗漏的药物和诊断检测方法开辟了新的研究途径。世界卫生组织认为登革热是全球十大公共卫生问题之一。目前尚无针对登革病毒的特定抗病毒疗法,也无法预测哪些患者会出现潜在致命的严重登革热,其特征是血管渗漏和循环休克。在这里,我们表明血管周细胞(周细胞)通过与内皮细胞的非接触信号放大登革病毒蛋白 NS1 诱导的血管渗漏作用。虽然已知周细胞有助于非传染性血管渗漏,但这是这些细胞首次被牵连到传染病的血管作用中。我们的发现可能为对抗登革热和潜在其他感染性血管渗漏综合征的新疗法和诊断方法铺平道路。