Title of article
Bluetongue virus infection alters the impedance of monolayers of bovine endothelial cells as a result of cell death
Author/Authors
Drew، نويسنده , , Clifton P. and Gardner، نويسنده , , Ian A. and Mayo، نويسنده , , Christie E. and Matsuo، نويسنده , , Eiko and Roy، نويسنده , , Polly and MacLachlan، نويسنده , , N. James، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
سالنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Pages
8
From page
108
To page
115
Abstract
Bluetongue virus (BTV) is the cause of bluetongue, an emerging, arthropod-transmitted disease of ungulates. Bluetongue is characterized by vascular injury with hemorrhage, tissue infarction and widespread edema, lesions that are consistent with those of the so-called viral hemorrhagic fevers. To further investigate the pathogenesis of vascular injury in bluetongue, we utilized an electrical impedance assay and immunofluorescence staining to compare the effects of BTV infection on cultured bovine endothelial cells (bPAEC) with those of inducers of cell death (Triton X-100) and interendothelial gap formation (tissue necrosis factor [TNF]). The data confirm that the adherens junctions of BTV-infected bPAECs remained intact until 24 h post-infection, and that loss of monolayer impedance precisely coincided with onset of virus-induced cell death. In contrast, recombinant bovine TNF-α caused rapid loss of bPAEC monolayer impedance that was associated with interendothelial gap formation and redistribution of VE-cadherin, but without early cell death. The data from these in vitro studies are consistent with a pathogenesis of bluetongue that involves virus-induced vascular injury leading to thrombosis, hemorrhage and tissue necrosis. However, the contribution of cytokine-induced interendothelial gap formation with subsequent edema and hypovolemic shock contributes to the pathogenesis of bluetongue remains to be fully characterized.
Keywords
Bluetongue , Virus , endothelium
Journal title
Veterinary Immunology and Immunopathology
Serial Year
2010
Journal title
Veterinary Immunology and Immunopathology
Record number
2165530
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