| Literature DB >> 32751561 |
Harapan Harapan1,2,3,4, Alice Michie4, R Tedjo Sasmono5, Allison Imrie4.
Abstract
Dengue, caused by infection of any of four dengue virus serotypes (DENV-1 to DENV-4), is a mosquito-borne disease of major public health concern associated with significant morbidity, mortality, and economic cost, particularly in developing countries. Dengue incidence has increased 30-fold in the last 50 years and over 50% of the world's population, in more than 100 countries, live in areas at risk of DENV infection. We reviews DENV biology, epidemiology, transmission dynamics including circulating serotypes and genotypes, the immune response, the pathogenesis of the disease as well as updated diagnostic methods, treatments, vector control and vaccine developments.Entities:
Keywords: dengue; diagnosis; disease control; epidemiology; pathogenesis; treatment
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32751561 PMCID: PMC7472303 DOI: 10.3390/v12080829
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Viruses ISSN: 1999-4915 Impact factor: 5.048
Description of the structural and non-structural proteins of dengue virus (DENV).
| Protein | Structure | Function(s) |
|---|---|---|
| C | A 100 amino acid (aa) residue, homodimeric protein, containing four α-helical regions and an intrinsically disordered N-terminal domain. | C is involved in genome encapsidation. |
| prM/M | prM is a 166 aa residue protein, while M consists of 75 aa residues. | prM/M functions as a cap-like structure that protect the fusion peptide E from undergoing pre-mature fusion before virus release. |
| E | A 493–495 aa residue (53 kDa) class II N-glycosylated dimeric membrane fusion protein. In mature DENV, E is found as 90 homodimers that lie flat against the DENV surface forming a ‘smooth’ protein shell. Each of the monomer subunits is composed of three distinct domains (I, II and III). | E mediates virus binding and fusion to host cell membrane (domain III) and is responsible for the determination of host range, tropism and virulence (domain III). |
| NS1 | A 46 kDa dimeric glycosyl-phosphatidylinositol (GPI) anchored protein that exists in both intra- and extracellular forms. | NS1 is involved in the viral RNA replication complex as well as in viral defense through the inhibition of complement activation. |
| NS2A | A 218 aa residue protein, 22 kDa. | NS2A involved in the coordination of change between RNA packaging and replication and antagonism of interferon (IFN). |
| NS2B | A 130 aa residue (14 kDa) protein and is a membrane-associated protein. | NS2B associates with NS3 to form the DENV protease complex and serves as a cofactor in the structural activation of the DENV serine protease of NS3. |
| NS3 | A 618 aa (70 kDa) protein. The protease domain is N-terminal (residues 1–180) while the helicase domain is located at residues 180–618. | NS3 is multifunctional protein with chymotrypsin-like serine protease, RNA helicase, and RNA triphosphatase (RTP/NTPase) enzyme activity. NS3 is involved in cleaving the DENV polyprotein as well as RNA replication. |
| NS4A and NS4B | NS4A and NS4B are small hydrophobic proteins that consist 150 aa (16kDa) and 245–249 aa (27kDa), respectively. Both of them are integral membrane proteins. | NS4A induces membrane alterations that are important for virus replication. NS4B assists viral RNA replication through its direct interaction with NS3 and blocks IFN-induced signal transduction. |
| NS5 | A 900 aa residues (104 kDa) protein and is the most conserved DENV protein. The methyltransferase domain is located at residues 1–269 while the RNA-dependent RNA polymerase is located at residues 270–900. | NS5 is a bifunctional enzyme with a methyltransferase and RNA-dependent RNA polymerase activity. |
Sources: [11,12,18,19].
Factors associated with dengue incidence or dengue outbreaks.
| Factors | Reference(s) |
|---|---|
| Irregular use of vector control agent (temephos) | [ |
| Lack of knowledge about dengue fever | [ |
| Higher container index and higher Breteau index | [ |
| Lower-altitude cantons, higher temperature, higher humidity and higher rainfall | [ |
| Increased age | [ |
| Housing located in close proximity to the markets, slum areas, or uncovered sewer areas | [ |
| The presence of mosquito breeding sites in the garden or courtyard including the presence of discarded cans, discarded plastic containers, discarded tire casings, ponds, temples, receptacles in the plants with temporary water pools, gutter to collect rainwater, uncovered water storage container and food or water pans for animals. | [ |
| Unscreened houses, high number of persons per room, inappropriate shower facilities, lack of waste collection, poor household water storage, lack of air-conditioning, and discharging sewage directly into ponds or street drainage | [ |
Classification of DENV genotypes and their distributions.
| Serotype | Genotype | Distribution |
|---|---|---|
| DENV-1 | I | Strains from Southeast Asia, China and East Africa |
| II | Strains from Thailand (between 1950s and 1960s) | |
| III | Sylvatic strain collected in Malaysia and Malaysian strain 36,046 (2005) | |
| IV | Strains from the West Pacific islands and Australia | |
| V | Strains collected in the Americas, West Africa, and some strains from Asia | |
| DENV-2 | Asian 1 | Strains from Malaysia and Thailand |
| Asian 2 | Strains from Vietnam, China, Taiwan, Sri Lanka and the Philippines | |
| Cosmopolitan | Strains from Australia, East and West Africa, the Pacific and Indian ocean islands, the Indian subcontinent and the Middle East | |
| American | Strains from Latin America and older strains collected from the Caribbean, the Indian subcontinent and Pacific Islands in the 1950s and 1960s | |
| Asian/American | Strains from Thailand and Vietnam and strains collected in the Americas | |
| Sylvatic | Strains collected from humans, forest mosquitoes or sentinel monkeys in West Africa and Southeast Asia | |
| DENV-3 | I | Strains from Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines and recent isolates from the South Pacific islands |
| II | Strains from Thailand, Vietnam and Bangladesh | |
| III | Strains from Sri Lanka, India, Africa and Samoa and 1962 strain from Thailand | |
| IV | Strains from Puerto Rico, Latin and Central America and the 1965 Tahiti strain | |
| DENV-4 | I | Strains from Thailand, the Philippines, Sri Lanka, and Japan |
| II | Strains from Indonesia, Malaysia, Tahiti, the Caribbean and the Americas | |
| III | Thai strains that are distinct from other Thai isolates | |
| IV | Sylvatic strains from Malaysia |
Sources: [18,35].
Factors associated with severity of dengue.
| Factor | Reference(s) |
|---|---|
| Demographics | |
| Children aged 6–10 years and girls | [ |
| Caucasian race | [ |
| Chinese ethnicity | [ |
| Older age | [ |
| Age >5 years or age >40 years | [ |
| Female | [ |
| Type of infection | |
| Secondary dengue infection | [ |
| Laboratory parameters | |
| High hematocrit level | [ |
| High alanine aminotransferase | [ |
| Early increasing D-dimer | [ |
| High cholesterol level | [ |
| Low total serum cholesterol | [ |
| Low-density lipoprotein C | [ |
| Leucopenia | [ |
| Hypoalbuminemia or hypoproteinemia | [ |
| High alanine transaminase levels and aspartate transaminase, thrombocytopenia, prothrombin time, activated partial thromboplastin time and fibrinogen level | [ |
| High hematocrit level | [ |
| High lactate and absolute atypical lymphocyte levels. | [ |
| Low platelet count | [ |
| Thrombocytopenia | [ |
| Clinical findings | |
| Mean arterial pressure <80 mmHg | [ |
| Spontaneous bleeding | [ |
| Hepatomegaly | [ |
| Ascites | [ |
| Pleural effusion | [ |
| Persistent nausea/vomiting | [ |
| Lethargy, thick gallbladder | [ |
| Abdominal pain | [ |
| Hemoconcentration | [ |
| Headache, palmar erythema, joint pain, lymphadenopathy, giddiness, gallbladder wall edema | [ |
| Hepato-splenomegaly | [ |
| Hemoconcentration | [ |
| Oliguria | [ |
| Neurological signs | [ |
| Virology | |
| DENV serotype (DENV-3 in primary infection in Southeast Asia) | [ |
| High early viral load | [ |
| Host factors | |
| Polymorphism in TNF-α, FcγRII, CTLA-4, TGF-β1, HPA, DC-SIGN, TAP, MBL2 and JAK1 gene. | [ |
| Allergy treated with steroids and hypertension | [ |
| ABO blood group | [ |
| Diabetes | [ |
| Hypertension (or with diabetes) | [ |
| Skin allergy | [ |
| Malnutrition (protective rule) | [ |
Factors associated with mortality or fatality of dengue case.
| Factors | Reference(s) |
|---|---|
| Demographic | |
| Female | [ |
| Caucasoid race (compared to Negroid race, in Cuba) | [ |
| Type of DENV infection | |
| Secondary DENV-2 infections | [ |
| Clinical findings | |
| Persistent vomiting, lethargy, respiratory distress. | [ |
| Plasma leakage (shock) | [ |
| Severe bleeding (hemoptysis), epistaxis | [ |
| Altered sensorium, abnormal reflexes, edema | [ |
| Co-morbidities (diabetes mellitus and hypertension). | [ |
| Myalgia | [ |
| Had severe hepatitis, an altered mental status | [ |
| Laboratory parameters | |
| High leucocyte counts | [ |
| High platelet counts | [ |
| High blood urea nitrogen or high creatinine level | [ |
| Low serum albumin concentrations | [ |
| High serum sodium, potassium, and bilirubin levels | [ |
| High activated partial thromboplastin time, bilirubin levels and serum glutamic-pyruvic transaminase | [ |
Summary of trial studies on dengue treatment.
| Component | Dose(s) | Group Arm (T/P) * | Endpoint(s) | Main Finding(s) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Carbazochrome sodium sulfonate | 300 mg infusion (day 1 and 2), followed by 150 mg (day 3) | Children | Primary: Reduction in number of patients experiencing shock or pleural effusion | There was no significant difference in shock or pleural effusion between groups | [ |
| Chloroquine | 600 mg loading dose followed by 600 mg (day 2) and 300mg (day 3) per oral | Adult | Primary: Time to resolution of viremia and NS1 antigenemia | There was no significant difference in primary endpoints between groups. | [ |
| Prednisolone | (1). 2 mg/kg orally for 3 days | Children and young adults | Primary: | Hyperglycemia was higher in treatment groups (2 mg/kg). | [ |
| Balapiravir | (1). 3000 mg orally for 5 days | Adult | Primary: Clinical signs and routine laboratory markers, plasma concentrations of 10 immune response components and viremia | There was no significant difference in all primary endpoints between groups. | [ |
| Recombinant human IL-11 | 1.5 mg subcutaneously single dose | Adult | Primary: Increase in platelet count at 48 h | The increase of platelets in patients with severe thrombocytopenia was greater in the treatment group | [ |
| Single donor platelet transfusion | Approximately 5 × 1011 platelets | Adult | Primary: Platelet count increments at 24 and 72 h. | The primary endpoints were significantly higher in the treatment group. | [ |
| Celgosivir | 400 mg loading dose followed by 200 mg every 12 h orally (total nine doses) | Adult | Primary: Mean virological log reduction from baseline for days 2, 3, and 4, and area under the curve for a temperature above 37 °C from 0 h to 96 h. | There was no significant difference in the primary endpoints between groups. | [ |
| Lovastatin | 40 mg for 5 days orally | Adult | Primary: Safety | There was no difference in incidence of AEs between groups | [ |
| Lovastatin | 80 mg for 5 days orally | Adult | Primary: Safety | No difference in AEs and serious AEs observed between groups. | [ |
* T/P: treatment/placebo; AE: Adverse event, DHF: dengue hemorrhagic fever, DSS: dengue shock syndrome, ICU: intensive care unit, NS1: non-structural protein 1.