Dengue virus infection in mice induces bone marrow myeloid cell differentiation and generates Ly6Glow immature neutrophils with modulated functions

Author:

Duggal Shweta1,Rawat Surender1,Siddqui Gazala2,Vishwakarma Preeti2,Samal Sweety2,Banerjee Arup1ORCID,Vrati Sudhanshu1

Affiliation:

1. Laboratory of Virology, Regional Centre for Biotechnology , NCR Biotech Science Cluster, 3rd Milestone, Faridabad Gurgaon Expressway, Faridabad-121001, Haryana , India

2. Influenza and Respiratory Virus Laboratory, Centre for Virus Research, Therapeutics and Vaccines, Translational Health Science and Technology Institute, NCR Biotech Science Cluster , 3rd Milestone, Faridabad Gurgaon Expressway, Faridabad-121001, Haryana , India

Abstract

Abstract While neutrophil activation during dengue virus infection is known, the effect of dengue virus infection on neutrophil biogenesis has not been studied. We demonstrate that dengue virus serotype 2 induces the differentiation of mice progenitor cells ex vivo toward the CD11b+Ly6C+Ly6G+ granulocyte population. We further observed an expansion of CD11b+Ly6CintLy6Glow myeloid cells in the bone marrow of dengue virus serotype 2–infected AG129 mice with low CXCR2 expression, implying an immature population. Additionally, dengue virus serotype 2 alone could induce the differentiation of promyelocyte cell line HL-60 into neutrophil-like cells, as evidenced by increased expression of CD10, CD66b, CD16, CD11b, and CD62L, corroborating the preferential shift toward neutrophil differentiation by dengue virus serotype 2 in the mouse model of dengue infection. The functional analysis showed that dengue virus serotype 2–induced neutrophil-like cells exhibited reduced phagocytic activity and enhanced NETosis, as evidenced by the increased production of myeloperoxidase, citrullinated histones, extracellular DNA, and superoxide. These neutrophil-like cells lose their ability to proliferate irreversibly and undergo arrest in the G0 to G1 phase of the cell cycle. Further studies show that myeloperoxidase-mediated signaling operating through the reactive oxygen species axis may be involved in dengue virus serotype 2–induced proliferation and differentiation of bone marrow cells as ABAH, a myeloperoxidase inhibitor, limits cell proliferation in vitro and ex vivo, affects the cell cycle, and reduces reactive oxygen species production. Additionally, myeloperoxidase inhibitor reduced NETosis and vascular leakage in dengue virus serotype 2–infected AG129 mice. Our study thus provides evidence that dengue virus serotype 2 can accelerate the differentiation of bone marrow progenitor cells into neutrophils through myeloperoxidase and modulate their functions.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cell Biology,Immunology,Immunology and Allergy

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