| Literature DB >> 28542641 |
Monique Ramos de Oliveira Trugilho1,2, Eugenio Damaceno Hottz3,4, Giselle Villa Flor Brunoro1, André Teixeira-Ferreira1, Paulo Costa Carvalho5, Gustavo Adolfo Salazar6, Guy A Zimmerman3,7, Fernando A Bozza8, Patrícia T Bozza3, Jonas Perales1.
Abstract
Dengue is the most prevalent human arbovirus disease worldwide. Dengue virus (DENV) infection causes syndromes varying from self-limiting febrile illness to severe dengue. Although dengue pathophysiology is not completely understood, it is widely accepted that increased inflammation plays important roles in dengue pathogenesis. Platelets are blood cells classically known as effectors of hemostasis which have been increasingly recognized to have major immune and inflammatory activities. Nevertheless, the phenotype and effector functions of platelets in dengue pathogenesis are not completely understood. Here we used quantitative proteomics to investigate the protein content of platelets in clinical samples from patients with dengue compared to platelets from healthy donors. Our assays revealed a set of 252 differentially abundant proteins. In silico analyses associated these proteins with key molecular events including platelet activation and inflammatory responses, and with events not previously attributed to platelets during dengue infection including antigen processing and presentation, proteasome activity, and expression of histones. From these results, we conducted functional assays using samples from a larger cohort of patients and demonstrated evidence for platelet activation indicated by P-selectin (CD62P) translocation and secretion of granule-stored chemokines by platelets. In addition, we found evidence that DENV infection triggers HLA class I synthesis and surface expression by a mechanism depending on functional proteasome activity. Furthermore, we demonstrate that cell-free histone H2A released during dengue infection binds to platelets, increasing platelet activation. These findings are consistent with functional importance of HLA class I, proteasome subunits, and histones that we found exclusively in proteome analysis of platelets in samples from dengue patients. Our study provides the first in-depth characterization of the platelet proteome in dengue, and sheds light on new mechanisms of platelet activation and platelet-mediated immune and inflammatory responses.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28542641 PMCID: PMC5453622 DOI: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1006385
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Pathog ISSN: 1553-7366 Impact factor: 6.823
Fig 1Distribution of mapped proteins in platelets from dengue patients and healthy volunteers.
(A) Venn diagram of mapped protein entries present in platelets from healthy volunteers (Control) and patients with dengue. Both conditions shared 2,557 proteins; 339 and 440 proteins were identified only in control or dengue platelet samples, respectively. (B) Volcano plot of all shared protein entries and their abundance in dengue and control conditions. The graph represents TFold pairwise analysis of the two biological conditions. Each dot represents a protein mapped according to its log2 (fold change) on the ordinate axis and its -log2 (t-test p-value) on the abscissa axis. Red dots indicate proteins that satisfy neither the fold-change cutoff nor the FDR cutoff α (0.05). Green dots depict protein entries that satisfy the fold-change cutoff but not FDR α. Orange dots indicate proteins that satisfy both fold-change and FDR α, but present low fold changes. Blue dots represent protein entries that satisfy all statistical filters. The result shows 86 proteins significantly up-regulated (blue dots above the dotted line on Volcano plot) and 81 proteins down-regulated (blue dots below the dotted line on the graph) in platelets from patients with dengue.
Characteristics of dengue-infected patients and healthy volunteers in proteome and validation cohorts.
| Proteome | Validation | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Control (5) | Dengue (6) | Control (22) | Dengue (36) | ||
| Age, years | 31 (29–34) | 37 (28–44) | 31 (29–34) | 33 (28–42) | 0.759 |
| Gender, male | 2 (40%) | 3 (50%) | 11 (50%) | 20 (55.5%) | 0.400 |
| Platelet count, x1,000 /mm3 | – | 120 (94–171) | – | 109 (80–161) | 0.827 |
| Hematocrit, % | – | 44.5 (41–45.3) | – | 41.8 (39.7–45) | 0.569 |
| Albumin, g/dL | – | 3.7 (3.5–4.1) | – | 3.6 (3.3–3.7) | 0.291 |
| TGO/AST, IU/L | – | 83.4 (36–177) | – | 53.5 (32–121) | 0.508 |
| TGP/ALT, IU/L | – | 107.5 (55–249) | – | 68 (46.2–124) | 0.326 |
| Mild dengue | 2 (33.3%) | 17 (47.2%) | 0.673 | ||
| Dengue with warning signs | – | 4 (66.6%) | – | 16 (44.4%) | 0.400 |
| Severe dengue | – | 0 (0%) | – | 3 (8.3%) | 1.000 |
| Hemorrhagic manifestations | – | 4 (66.6%) | – | 15 (41.6%) | 0.384 |
| Intravenous fluid resuscitation | – | 1 (16.6%) | – | 11 (30.5%) | 0.655 |
| Secondary Infection | – | 6 (100%) | – | 30 (83.3%) | 1.000 |
| PCR positive | – | 4 (66.6%) | – | 19 (52.7%) | 0.673 |
| DENV-1 | 0 (0.0%) | 7 (36.8%) | 0.567 | ||
| DENV-4 | 4 (100%) | 12 (63.3%) | 0.180 | ||
| IgM+ | 0 (0%) | 6 (100%) | 0 (0%) | 31 (86.1%) | 1.000 |
| IgG+ | 2 (40%) | 6 (100%) | 11 (50%) | 34 (94.4%) | 1.00 |
| NS1+ | 0 (0%) | 2 (33.3%) | 0 (0%) | 6 (16.7%) | 0.319 |
Data are expressed as median (interquartile range) or number (%).
* Patients whose platelets were used in the proteome analysis were also included in the validation cohort.
** p values between patients in proteome and validation cohorts.
Abdominal pain or tenderness, persistent vomiting, clinical fluid accumulation, mucosal bleed or increased hematocrit concurrent with rapid decrease in platelet count; according to WHO criteria (2009).
Severe plasma leakage, fluid accumulation with ascites (evidenced by ultrasonography), and/or severe bleeding (vaginal bleed and/or gastrointestinal bleed); according to WHO criteria (2009).
Gingival bleed, vaginal bleed, gastrointestinal bleed, petechiae and/or exanthema.
ALT, alanine aminotransferase; AST, aspartate aminotransferase; TGO, glutamic-oxalacetic transaminase; TGP, glutamic-pyruvic transaminase.
Characteristics of dengue-infected patients classified as mild dengue or dengue with warning signs and severe dengue.
| Control (22) | Mild (17) | WS+Sev (19) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age, years | 31 (29–34) | 36 (29–49) | 31 (22–41) | 0.129 |
| Gender, male | 11 (50%) | 8 (47%) | 12 (63%) | 0.503 |
| Platelet count, x1,000 /mm3 | – | 121 (97.5–210.5) | 98 (74–134) | |
| Hematocrit, % | – | 41.0 (39.5–44.2) | 44.3 (39.6–46.7) | 0.093 |
| Albumin, g/dL | – | 3.7 (3.6–3.9) | 3.4 (3.1–3.7) | |
| TGO/AST, IU/L | – | 53.5 (28.7–92.0) | 55.5 (34.5–131) | 0.407 |
| TGP/ALT, IU/L | – | 91.5 (35.7–139.5) | 64.0 (48.7–120) | 0.985 |
| Hemorrhagic manifestations | – | 5 (29.4%) | 10 (52.6%) | 0.192 |
| Clinical signs of increased vascular permeability | – | 3 (17.6%) | 15 (78,9%) | |
| Intravenous fluid resuscitation | – | 1 (5.9%) | 10 (52.6%) | |
| Secondary Infection | – | 15 (88.2%) | 15 (78.9%) | 0.662 |
| PCR positive | – | 9 (52.9%) | 10 (52.6%) | 1.000 |
| DENV-1 | – | 3 (33.3%) | 4 (40%) | 1.000 |
| DENV-4 | – | 6 (66.6%) | 6 (60%) | 1.000 |
| IgM+ | – | 13 (76.5%) | 18 (94.7%) | 0.167 |
| IgG+ | – | 17 (100%) | 17 (89.5%) | 0.487 |
| NS1+ | – | 3 (17.6%) | 3 (15.8%) | 1.000 |
Data are expressed as median (interquartile range) or number (%).
Gingival bleed, vaginal bleed, gastrointestinal bleed, petechiae and/or exanthema.
2Postural hypotension, oliguria, ascites, hypoalbuminemia (<3.6 g/dL) and/or >20%-increase in hematocrit.
*p values between mild dengue and dengue with warning signs plus severe dengue.
ALT, alanine aminotransferase; AST, aspartate aminotransferase; TGO, glutamicoxalacetic transaminase; TGP, glutamic-pyruvic transaminase.