Andrew D. Davidson, Elodie Décembre, Sonia Assil, Gavin R. Screaton, Marlène Dreux, Juthathip Mongkolsapaya, Wanwisa Dejnirattisai, Marine L. B. Hillaire, Naiglin, Laurence, Virologie humaine, École normale supérieure de Lyon (ENS de Lyon)-IFR128-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM), and École normale supérieure - Lyon (ENS Lyon)-IFR128-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)
Dengue virus (DENV) is the leading cause of mosquito-borne viral illness and death in humans. Like many viruses, DENV has evolved potent mechanisms that abolish the antiviral response within infected cells. Nevertheless, several in vivo studies have demonstrated a key role of the innate immune response in controlling DENV infection and disease progression. Here, we report that sensing of DENV infected cells by plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDCs) triggers a robust TLR7-dependent production of IFNα, concomitant with additional antiviral responses, including inflammatory cytokine secretion and pDC maturation. We demonstrate that unlike the efficient cell-free transmission of viral infectivity, pDC activation depends on cell-to-cell contact, a feature observed for various cell types and primary cells infected by DENV, as well as West Nile virus, another member of the Flavivirus genus. We show that the sensing of DENV infected cells by pDCs requires viral envelope protein-dependent secretion and transmission of viral RNA. Consistently with the cell-to-cell sensing-dependent pDC activation, we found that DENV structural components are clustered at the interface between pDCs and infected cells. The actin cytoskeleton is pivotal for both this clustering at the contacts and pDC activation, suggesting that this structural network likely contributes to the transmission of viral components to the pDCs. Due to an evolutionarily conserved suboptimal cleavage of the precursor membrane protein (prM), DENV infected cells release uncleaved prM containing-immature particles, which are deficient for membrane fusion function. We demonstrate that cells releasing immature particles trigger pDC IFN response more potently than cells producing fusion-competent mature virus. Altogether, our results imply that immature particles, as a carrier to endolysosome-localized TLR7 sensor, may contribute to regulate the progression of dengue disease by eliciting a strong innate response., Author Summary Viral recognition by the host often triggers an antiviral state, which suppresses viral spread and imparts adaptive immunity. Like many viruses, dengue virus (DENV) defeats the host-sensing pathway within infected cells. However, in vivo studies have demonstrated a key role of innate immunity in controlling DENV infection. Here we report that sensing of DENV-infected cells by non-permissive innate immune cells, the plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDCs), triggers a cell-contact- and TLR7-dependent activation of a strong antiviral IFN response. This cell-to-cell sensing involves transmission of viral elements that are clustered at the interface between pDCs and infected cells and is regulated by the actin network. Importantly, we revealed that uncleaved prM surface protein-containing immature particles play a key function in stimulating the innate immune response. These non-infectious immature particles are released by infected cells as a consequence of a suboptimal cleavage site, which is an evolutionarily conserved viral feature that likely favors the export of infectious virus by prevention of premature membrane fusion in the secretory pathway. Therefore our results highlight a conceptually novel trade-off between efficient infectious virus release and the production of IFN-inducing particles. This concept may have broad importance for the many viruses that, like DENV, can disable the pathogen-sensing machinery within infected cells and can release uncleaved glycoprotein-containing non-infectious particles.