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Rat cytomegalovirus efficiently replicates in dendritic cells and induces changes in their transcriptional profile.


ABSTRACT: Dendritic cells (DC) play a crucial role in generating and maintaining antiviral immunity. While DC are implicated in the antiviral defense by inducing T cell responses, they can also become infected by Cytomegalovirus (CMV). CMV is not only highly species-specific but also specialized in evading immune protection, and this specialization is in part due to characteristic genes encoded by a given virus. Here, we investigated whether rat CMV can infect XCR1+ DC and if infection of DC alters expression of cell surface markers and migration behavior. We demonstrate that wild-type RCMV and a mutant virus lacking the γ-chemokine ligand xcl1 (Δvxcl1 RCMV) infect splenic rat DC ex vivo and identify viral assembly compartments. Replication-competent RCMV reduced XCR1 and MHCII surface expression. Further, gene expression of infected DC was analyzed by bulk RNA-sequencing (RNA-Seq). RCMV infection reverted a state of DC activation that was induced by DC cultivation. On the functional level, we observed impaired chemotactic activity of infected XCR1+ DC compared to mock-treated cells. We therefore speculate that as a result of RCMV infection, DC exhibit diminished XCR1 expression and are thereby blocked from the lymphocyte crosstalk.

SUBMITTER: Madela-Monchinger JC 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC10702230 | biostudies-literature | 2023

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Rat cytomegalovirus efficiently replicates in dendritic cells and induces changes in their transcriptional profile.

Madela-Mönchinger Julia Cecilia JC   Wolf Silver Anthony SA   Wyler Emanuel E   Bauer Agnieszka A   Mischke Marius M   Möller Lars L   Juranić Lisnić Vanda V   Landthaler Markus M   Malyshkina Anna A   Voigt Sebastian S  

Frontiers in immunology 20231123


Dendritic cells (DC) play a crucial role in generating and maintaining antiviral immunity. While DC are implicated in the antiviral defense by inducing T cell responses, they can also become infected by Cytomegalovirus (CMV). CMV is not only highly species-specific but also specialized in evading immune protection, and this specialization is in part due to characteristic genes encoded by a given virus. Here, we investigated whether rat CMV can infect XCR1<sup>+</sup> DC and if infection of DC al  ...[more]

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