Literature DB >> 12917460

Influenza A virus-induced apoptosis in bronchiolar epithelial (NCI-H292) cells limits pro-inflammatory cytokine release.

Edward W A Brydon1, Harry Smith2, Clive Sweet1.   

Abstract

Infection of cells with influenza A virus results in cell death with apoptotic characteristics. Apoptosis is regarded as a non-inflammatory process. However, during influenza an inflammatory response occurs in the airway epithelium. An examination of this apparent paradox was made using influenza A virus infection of human nasal and bronchiolar epithelial cells. Some cytokine genes (IL-18, CCL2 and CCL5) were expressed constitutively in nasal cells but no cytokine was released. In bronchiolar cells, IL-1 beta, IL-6 and CXCL8 expression was constitutive, whilst CCL2 and CCL5 expression was upregulated following influenza virus infection. IL-6, CXCL8 and CCL5 were released but IL-1 beta and CCL2 were not. In bronchiolar cells, cell death was inhibited by the caspase-8 (Z-IETD-fmk) and pan-caspase (Z-VAD-fmk) inhibitors and these inhibitors enhanced expression of CCL5 and increased the levels of the three secreted cytokines significantly. Thus, the amount of each cytokine released from bronchiolar cells is reduced during cell death, implying that the observed inflammatory response in influenza would be greater if cell death did not occur. Reduced cytokine release is also associated with fragmentation of the Golgi body, as the caspase inhibitors also rescued influenza A virus-induced fragmentation of the Golgi ribbon.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12917460     DOI: 10.1099/vir.0.18913-0

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Gen Virol        ISSN: 0022-1317            Impact factor:   3.891


  38 in total

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8.  Lack of Bax prevents influenza A virus-induced apoptosis and causes diminished viral replication.

Authors:  Jeffrey E McLean; Emmanuel Datan; Demetrius Matassov; Zahra F Zakeri
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9.  Sharing the burden: antigen transport and firebreaks in immune responses.

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10.  How sticky should a virus be? The impact of virus binding and release on transmission fitness using influenza as an example.

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Journal:  J R Soc Interface       Date:  2014-01-15       Impact factor: 4.118

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