Contribution of macrophage migration inhibitory factor to the pathogenesis of dengue virus infection

I Assunção-Miranda, FA Amaral, FA Bozza… - The FASEB …, 2010 - Wiley Online Library
The FASEB Journal, 2010Wiley Online Library
Dengue fever is an emerging viral disease transmitted by arthropods to humans in tropical
countries. Dengue hemorrhagic fever (DHF) is escalating in frequency and mortality rates.
Here we studied the involvement of macrophage migration inhibitory factor (MIF) in dengue
virus (DENV) infection and its pathogenesis. Patients with DHF had elevated plasma
concentrations of MIF. Both leukocytes from these patients and macrophages from healthy
donors infected in vitro with DENV showed a substantial amount of MIF within lipid droplets …
Abstract
Dengue fever is an emerging viral disease transmitted by arthropods to humans in tropical countries. Dengue hemorrhagic fever (DHF) is escalating in frequency and mortality rates. Here we studied the involvement of macrophage migration inhibitory factor (MIF) in dengue virus (DENV) infection and its pathogenesis. Patients with DHF had elevated plasma concentrations of MIF. Both leukocytes from these patients and macrophages from healthy donors infected in vitro with DENV showed a substantial amount of MIF within lipid droplets. The secretion of MIF by macrophages and hepatocytes required a productive infection and occurred without an increase in gene transcription or cell death, thus indicating active secretion from preformed stocks. In vivo infection of wild‐type and miFdeficient (Mif−/−) mice demonstrated a role of MIF in dengue pathogenesis. Clinical disease was less severe in Mif−/− mice, and they exhibited a significant delay in lethality, lower viremia, and lower viral load in the spleen than wild‐type mice. This reduction in all parameters of severity on DENV infection in Mif−/− mice correlated with reduced proinflam‐matory cytokine concentrations. These results demon‐strated the contribution of MIF to the pathogenesis of dengue and pointed to a possible beneficial role of neutralizing MIF as an adjunctive therapeutic approach to treat the severe forms of the disease.—Assuncäo‐Miranda, I., Amaral, F. A., Bozza, F. A., Fagundes, C. T., Sousa, L. P., Souza, D. G., Pacheco, P., Barbosa‐Lima, G., Gomes, R. N., Bozza, P. T., Da Poian, A. T., Teixeira, M. M., Bozza, M. T. Contribution of macro‐phage migration inhibitory factor to the pathogenesis of dengue virus infection. FASEB J. 24, 218–228 (2010). www.fasebj.org
Wiley Online Library