Literature DB >> 561645

Contrasting effects of rabbit and human platelets on chikungunya virus infectivity.

M A Chernesky, R P Larke.   

Abstract

Chikungunya virus infectivity was markedly stabilized in the presence of washed suspensions of human platelets but rapidly disappeared in similar preparations of rabbit platelets. Supernatant fluids collected from human platelets had some stabilizing effect on chikungunya virus over a 6-day incubation period at 37 degrees C. Rabbit platelet supernatant fluid had no virus-stabilizing effect, nor did it demonstrate any capacity to inactivate virus as compared to whole rabbit platelet preparations. Thin-section election microscopy demonstrated that chikungunya virus formed an associated with human platelets by becoming entrapped in platelet aggregates; during this process some of the platelets appeared to have undergone degranulation and lysis. Rabbit platelets exposed to chikungunya virus for 24 h demonstrated a considerable amount of platelet degranulation and lysis but virus was not visualized either in association with platelet membranes or within phagocytic vacuoles in the platelet cytoplasm. Human platelets, which appear to be more stable under these incubation conditions, may protect chikungunya virus infectivity from heat inactivation by surrounding viruses with large platelet aggregates whereas rabbit platelets, which appear to be more fragile, do not afford this type of protection. Thus, chikungunya virus in the presence of rabbit platelets may become inactivated by heat or may become bound irreversibly to membranes in such a fashion that infectivity assay and electron microscopy techniques may prove to be too insensitive for detection of virus.

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Year:  1977        PMID: 561645     DOI: 10.1139/m77-185

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Can J Microbiol        ISSN: 0008-4166            Impact factor:   2.419


  3 in total

1.  Association of herpes simplex virus with platelets of experimentally infected mice.

Authors:  B Forghani; N J Schmidt
Journal:  Arch Virol       Date:  1983       Impact factor: 2.574

2.  Photochemical inactivation of chikungunya virus in human apheresis platelet components by amotosalen and UVA light.

Authors:  Konstantin A Tsetsarkin; Adam Sampson-Johannes; Lynette Sawyer; John Kinsey; Stephen Higgs; Dana L Vanlandingham
Journal:  Am J Trop Med Hyg       Date:  2013-03-25       Impact factor: 2.345

3.  Increased platelet activation and platelet-inflammasome engagement during chikungunya infection.

Authors:  Isaclaudia Gomes de Azevedo-Quintanilha; Mariana Macedo Campos; Ana Paula Teixeira Monteiro; Alessandra Dantas do Nascimento; Andrea Surrage Calheiros; Douglas Mathias Oliveira; Suelen Silva Gomes Dias; Vinicius Cardoso Soares; Julia da Cunha Santos; Isabel Tavares; Thiago Moreno Lopes Souza; Eugenio D Hottz; Fernando A Bozza; Patricia T Bozza
Journal:  Front Immunol       Date:  2022-09-15       Impact factor: 8.786

  3 in total

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