Dabie bandavirus infection induces macrophagic pyroptosis and this process is attenuated by platelets

Sicong Yu(Zhejiang Chinese Medical University), Qinyi Zhang(Zhejiang Chinese Medical University), Lingxuan Su(Zhejiang Center for Disease Control and Prevention), Ji He(Blood Center of Zhejiang Province), Wen Shi(Zhejiang Center for Disease Control and Prevention), Hao Yan(Zhejiang Center for Disease Control and Prevention), Haiyan Mao(Zhejiang Center for Disease Control and Prevention), Yi Sun(Zhejiang Center for Disease Control and Prevention), Dongqing Cheng(Zhejiang Chinese Medical University), Xuan Wang(Shaoxing University), Yanjun Zhang(Zhejiang Center for Disease Control and Prevention), Lei Fang(Sir Run Run Shaw Hospital)
PLoS neglected tropical diseases
July 24, 2023
Cited by 10Open Access
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Abstract

Severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome (SFTS) is an emerging tick-borne infection with a high mortality rate in humans, which is caused by Dabie bandavirus (DBV), formerly known as SFTS virus. Clinical manifestations of SFTS are characterized by high fever, thrombocytopenia, leukopenia, hemorrhage, gastrointestinal symptoms, myalgia and local lymph node enlargement with up to 30% case fatality rates in human. Macrophage depletion in secondary lymphoid organs have important roles in the pathogenic process of fatal SFTS, but its exact cell death mechanism remains largely unknown. Here, we showed for the first time that DBV infection induced macrophagic pyroptosis, as evidenced by swollen cells, pore-forming structures, accumulation of gasdermin D N-terminal (GSDMD-NT) as well as the release of lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) and IL-1β in human macrophages. In addition to the upregulation of pyronecrosis genes, the expressions of pyroptosis-related proteins (GSDMD, caspase-1 and IL-1β) were also elevated. To be noted, platelets were found to play a protective role in DBV-derived pyroptosis. Transcriptome analysis and in vitro studies demonstrated that platelets significantly reduced the gene expressions and protein production of pro-pyroptotic markers and inflammatory cytokines in macrophages, whereas platelets conferred a propagation advantage for DBV. Collectively, this study demonstrates a novel mechanism by which DBV invasion triggers pyroptosis as a host defense to remove replication niches in human macrophages and platelets provide an additional layer to reduce cellular death. These findings may have important implications to the pathogenesis of lethal DBV, and provide new ideas for developing novel therapeutics to combat its infection.


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