A blunted blood plasmacytoid dendritic cell response to an acute systemic viral infection is associated with increased disease severity

S Pichyangkul, TP Endy, S Kalayanarooj… - The Journal of …, 2003 - journals.aai.org
S Pichyangkul, TP Endy, S Kalayanarooj, A Nisalak, K Yongvanitchit, S Green, AL Rothman
The Journal of Immunology, 2003journals.aai.org
At least two distinct human dendritic cell (DC) subsets are produced in the bone marrow and
circulate in the peripheral blood-precursor myeloid DCs (pre-mDCs) and plasmacytoid DCs
(PDCs). Both lineages of DCs are instrumental in antiviral innate immunity and shaping Th1
adaptive immune responses. PDCs are the most potent IFN-α-producing cells to viral
pathogens. Dengue, an acute flavivirus disease, provides a model to study DC responses to
a self-limited human viral infection. We analyzed circulating DC subsets in a prospective …
Abstract
At least two distinct human dendritic cell (DC) subsets are produced in the bone marrow and circulate in the peripheral blood-precursor myeloid DCs (pre-mDCs) and plasmacytoid DCs (PDCs). Both lineages of DCs are instrumental in antiviral innate immunity and shaping Th1 adaptive immune responses. PDCs are the most potent IFN-α-producing cells to viral pathogens. Dengue, an acute flavivirus disease, provides a model to study DC responses to a self-limited human viral infection. We analyzed circulating DC subsets in a prospective study of children with dengue across a broad range of illness severities: healthy controls; mild, nondengue, presumed viral infections; moderately ill dengue fever; and, the most severe form of illness, dengue hemorrhagic fever. We also examined PDC responses in monkeys with asymptomatic dengue viremia and to dengue virus exposure in vitro. The absolute number and frequency of circulating pre-mDCs early in acute viral illness decreased as illness severity increased. Depressed pre-mDC blood levels appeared to be part of the typical innate immune response to acute viral infection. The frequency of circulating PDCs trended upward and the absolute number of circulating PDCs remained stable early in moderately ill children with dengue fever, mild other, nondengue, febrile illness, and monkeys with asymptomatic dengue viremia. However, there was an early decrease in circulating PDC levels in children who subsequently developed dengue hemorrhagic fever. A blunted blood PDC response to dengue virus infection was associated with higher viremia levels, and was part of an altered innate immune response and pathogenetic cascade leading to severe disease.
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