Lethal antibody enhancement of dengue disease in mice is prevented by Fc modification.

PLoS Pathog

Division of Infectious Diseases and Vaccinology, School of Public Health, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, California, United States of America.

Published: February 2010

AI Article Synopsis

  • If someone gets dengue from one virus type and then gets infected with a different type, it can make their sickness worse because of special antibodies in their body that react to both viruses.
  • In experiments with mice, researchers discovered that giving them antibodies increased the severity of the dengue disease, showing symptoms similar to those seen in very sick humans.
  • They also found that a modified antibody that couldn't attach to a specific receptor helped protect against severe dengue disease, which may lead to better treatments in the future.

Article Abstract

Immunity to one of the four dengue virus (DV) serotypes can increase disease severity in humans upon subsequent infection with another DV serotype. Serotype cross-reactive antibodies facilitate DV infection of myeloid cells in vitro by promoting virus entry via Fcgamma receptors (FcgammaR), a process known as antibody-dependent enhancement (ADE). However, despite decades of investigation, no in vivo model for antibody enhancement of dengue disease severity has been described. Analogous to human infants who receive anti-DV antibodies by transplacental transfer and develop severe dengue disease during primary infection, we show here that passive administration of anti-DV antibodies is sufficient to enhance DV infection and disease in mice using both mouse-adapted and clinical DV isolates. Antibody-enhanced lethal disease featured many of the hallmarks of severe dengue disease in humans, including thrombocytopenia, vascular leakage, elevated serum cytokine levels, and increased systemic viral burden in serum and tissue phagocytes. Passive transfer of a high dose of serotype-specific antibodies eliminated viremia, but lower doses of these antibodies or cross-reactive polyclonal or monoclonal antibodies all enhanced disease in vivo even when antibody levels were neutralizing in vitro. In contrast, a genetically engineered antibody variant (E60-N297Q) that cannot bind FcgammaR exhibited prophylactic and therapeutic efficacy against ADE-induced lethal challenge. These observations provide insight into the pathogenesis of antibody-enhanced dengue disease and identify a novel strategy for the design of therapeutic antibodies against dengue.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2820409PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1000790DOI Listing

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