Increased adaptive immune responses and proper feedback regulation protect against clinical dengue

Authors: Etienne Simon-Loriere (LM-Orsay, SELECT), Veasna Duong (LM-Orsay, SELECT), Ahmed Tawfik (LM-Orsay, SELECT), Sivlin Ung (LM-Orsay, SELECT), Sowath Ly (LM-Orsay, SELECT), Isabelle Casademont (LM-Orsay, SELECT), Matthieu Prot (LM-Orsay, SELECT), Noémie Courtejoie (LM-Orsay, SELECT), Kevin Bleakley (LM-Orsay, SELECT), Philippe Buchy, Arnaud Tarantola, Philippe Dussart, Tineke Cantaert, Anavaj Sakuntabhai

Science Translational Medicine, American Association for the Advancement of Science, 2017, 9 (405), pp.eaal5088
arXiv: 1712.05692v1 - DOI (q-bio.PE)

Abstract: Dengue is the most prevalent arthropod-borne viral disease. Clinical symptoms of dengue virus (DENV) infection range from classical mild dengue fever to severe, life-threatening dengue shock syndrome. However, most DENV infections cause few or no symptoms. Asymptomatic DENV-infected patients provide a unique opportunity to decipher the host immune responses leading to virus elimination without negative impact on t v 'health. We used an integrated approach of transcriptional profiling and immunological analysis comparing a Cambodian population of strictly asymptomatic viremic individuals with clinical dengue patients. Whereas inflammatory pathways and innate immune responses were similar between asymptomatic individuals and clinical dengue patients, expression of proteins related to antigen presentation and subsequent T and B cell activation pathways were differentially regulated, independent of viral load or previous DENV infection. Feedback mechanisms controlled the immune response in asymptomatic viremic individuals as demonstrated by increased activation of T cell apoptosis-related pathways and Fc$\gamma$RIIB signaling associated with decreased anti-DENV specific antibody concentrations. Taken together, our data illustrate that symptom-free DENV infection in children is determined by increased activation of the adaptive immune compartment and proper control mechanisms leading to elimination of viral infection without excessive immune activation, having implications for novel vaccine development strategies.

Submitted to arXiv on 11 Dec. 2017

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