| Literature DB >> 31648236 |
Patrick Younan1,2, Rodrigo I Santos1,2, Palaniappan Ramanathan1,2, Mathieu Iampietro1,2, Andrew Nishida3, Mukta Dutta3, Tatiana Ammosova4, Michelle Meyer1,2, Michael G Katze3,5, Vsevolod L Popov1,2, Sergei Nekhai4, Alexander Bukreyev1,2,6.
Abstract
Ebola virus (EBOV) infections are characterized by a pronounced lymphopenia that is highly correlative with fatalities. However, the mechanisms leading to T-cell depletion remain largely unknown. Here, we demonstrate that both viral mRNAs and antigens are detectable in CD4+ T cells despite the absence of productive infection. A protein phosphatase 1 inhibitor, 1E7-03, and siRNA-mediated suppression of viral antigens were used to demonstrate de novo synthesis of viral RNAs and antigens in CD4+ T cells, respectively. Cell-to-cell fusion of permissive Huh7 cells with non-permissive Jurkat T cells impaired productive EBOV infection suggesting the presence of a cellular restriction factor. We determined that viral transcription is partially impaired in the fusion T cells. Lastly, we demonstrate that exposure of T cells to EBOV resulted in autophagy through activation of ER-stress related pathways. These data indicate that exposure of T cells to EBOV results in an abortive infection, which likely contributes to the lymphopenia observed during EBOV infections.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31648236 PMCID: PMC6812753 DOI: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1008068
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Pathog ISSN: 1553-7366 Impact factor: 6.823
Fig 1Abortive EBOV infection in CD4+ T-cells.
(A-E) The number of viral genomic RNA (A) and specific viral mRNAs (B-E) copies/ng in CD4+ T-cells exposed to EBOV for 1, 2 and 5 days, determined by DDRT-PCR with background signals in mock-infected cells subtracted. (F) Histograms displaying the relative number of sequence reads for each viral mRNA at day 1 and 4 as determined by deep sequencing. Bottom right: the zoomed in fragment of the reads corresponding to the 5’-terminal part of the genome, which includes the L gene. (G) Numbers of viral genomic RNA (gRNA, left) and mRNA (right) copies normalized to GAPDH in mock-infected, EBOV-infected and 1E7-03 treated EBOV-infected cells. (H) Ratios of viral gRNA to mRNA in non-treated and 1E7-03 treated cells. (I). Analysis of the total and phosphorylated VP30 in Jurkat and SUP-T1 T cells and Huh7 cells incubated with EBOV for 2 or 5 days at MOI 3 PFU/cell by Western blot. Panel A: 1 of 3 independent experiments. Panels B-E: Average of duplicate reads from EBOV-exposed CD4+ T-cells isolated from one of 3 donors. Panel F: Representative number of reads from deep sequencing results depicted as histogram shown from 1 of 4 independent donors. Panel G: data from triplicate samples from one representative donor; two donors were analyzed resulting in similar data. *** P<0.001, **** P<0.0001.
Fig 3CD4+ T-cells express a cellular restriction factor that blocks EBOV replication.
(A) Flow cytometry analysis of fusion cells generated from DiL-labeled Jurkat cells and DiD-labeled Huh7 cells infected with EBOV-GFP. (B) Mean percentages of GFP+ cells based on triplicate samples ±SE. (C) Mean relative binding of EBOV based on triplicate samples ±SE. (D) Ratio cRNA to gRNA based on triplicate samples ±SE. (E) Ratio mRNA to gRNA based on triplicate samples ±SE. B: representative of one of 3 independent experiments. C, D, E: representative of one of two independent experiments. * P<0.05; *** P<0.001; **** P<0.0001; n.s., not significant (Student’s t-test).
Fig 2EBOV viral proteins are readily detectable in CD4+ T-cells.
(A) Confocal microscopy analysis of EBOV-exposed CD4+ T-cells for colocalization of the late-endosomal marker Rab7 (green), the lysosomal marker, LC3 (yellow) and EBOV antigens (red); nuclei are stained with DAPI (blue). (B) Dual immuno-gold labeling TEM of CD4+ T-cells exposed to EBOV: immunostained for CD3 with ~40 nm gold particles (black arrows) and for EBOV antigens with ~15 nm gold particles (red arrows). (C) Western blot analysis of EBOV VP40 and NP proteins in CD4+ T-cells incubated with EBOV for 2 or 5 days. (D) Western blot analysis of EBOV VP40 and NP proteins in EBOV-exposed Jurkat cells transfected with siRNAs targeting VP40 and NP. (E) Flow cytometry analysis of Jurkat cells and Huh7 cells incubated with EBOV. (F,G) Percentages of EBOV-positive Huh7 (F) and Jurkat (G) cells determined by flow cytometry, mean values based on triplicate samples ±SE. ** P<0.01, **** P<0.0001 (Student’s t-test). A, B: representative images from one of three independent experiments. C, D: representative images from one of two independent experiments. E–G: representative of one of two independent experiments performed.