Razieh Bitazar, Clinton Njinju Asaba, Saina Shegefti, Tatiana Noumi, Julien Van Grevenynghe, Salim T Islam, Patrick Labonté, Terence Ndonyi Bukong
{"title":"综合机制研究确定Reticulon-3是感染性外泌体驱动的登革热发病机制的关键调节剂。","authors":"Razieh Bitazar, Clinton Njinju Asaba, Saina Shegefti, Tatiana Noumi, Julien Van Grevenynghe, Salim T Islam, Patrick Labonté, Terence Ndonyi Bukong","doi":"10.3390/v17091238","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>The dengue virus (DENV) exploits host cell exosome pathways to disseminate and evade immunity. However, the host factors enabling this process remain poorly defined. Here, we demonstrate that DENV infection robustly induces expression of the short isoform of Reticulon 3 (RTN3S) in hepatic (Huh7) and monocytic cells, and that RTN3S is a critical driver of infectious exosome biogenesis. RTN3S physically associates with double-stranded viral RNA and the DENV non-structural protein 3 (NS3) in infected cells, indicating its integration into the viral replication complex. Loss of RTN3 markedly reduced exosome production and the exosomal export of viral RNA and proteins, demonstrating that RTN3S is required for efficient exosome-mediated viral release. Conversely, overexpression of full-length RTN3S dramatically increased the release of infectious virus-containing exosomes; truncation of the RTN3S C-terminal domain abolished this enhancement, confirming the essential role of the C-terminus in RTN3S's pro-viral exosomal function. In DENV-infected monocytes, we observed a shift toward a CD16-positive intermediate phenotype, accompanied by the upregulation of genes involved in vesicle biogenesis and stress response. These infected monocytes also secreted higher levels of inflammatory cytokines. Similarly, monocytes from Dengue patients exhibited high RTN3 expression, which correlated with an expansion of intermediate (CD16<sup>+</sup>) subsets and enriched expression of vesicle trafficking machinery genes. These findings reveal a previously unrecognized mechanism by which DENV hijacks RTN3S to promote the formation of infectious exosomes, thereby facilitating viral dissemination and immune evasion. RTN3S thus represents a novel element of the Dengue pathogenesis and a potential target for host-directed antiviral strategies.</p>","PeriodicalId":49328,"journal":{"name":"Viruses-Basel","volume":"17 9","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":3.5000,"publicationDate":"2025-09-13","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12474469/pdf/","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Integrative Mechanistic Studies Identify Reticulon-3 as a Critical Modulator of Infectious Exosome-Driven Dengue Pathogenesis.\",\"authors\":\"Razieh Bitazar, Clinton Njinju Asaba, Saina Shegefti, Tatiana Noumi, Julien Van Grevenynghe, Salim T Islam, Patrick Labonté, Terence Ndonyi Bukong\",\"doi\":\"10.3390/v17091238\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><p>The dengue virus (DENV) exploits host cell exosome pathways to disseminate and evade immunity. However, the host factors enabling this process remain poorly defined. Here, we demonstrate that DENV infection robustly induces expression of the short isoform of Reticulon 3 (RTN3S) in hepatic (Huh7) and monocytic cells, and that RTN3S is a critical driver of infectious exosome biogenesis. RTN3S physically associates with double-stranded viral RNA and the DENV non-structural protein 3 (NS3) in infected cells, indicating its integration into the viral replication complex. Loss of RTN3 markedly reduced exosome production and the exosomal export of viral RNA and proteins, demonstrating that RTN3S is required for efficient exosome-mediated viral release. Conversely, overexpression of full-length RTN3S dramatically increased the release of infectious virus-containing exosomes; truncation of the RTN3S C-terminal domain abolished this enhancement, confirming the essential role of the C-terminus in RTN3S's pro-viral exosomal function. In DENV-infected monocytes, we observed a shift toward a CD16-positive intermediate phenotype, accompanied by the upregulation of genes involved in vesicle biogenesis and stress response. These infected monocytes also secreted higher levels of inflammatory cytokines. Similarly, monocytes from Dengue patients exhibited high RTN3 expression, which correlated with an expansion of intermediate (CD16<sup>+</sup>) subsets and enriched expression of vesicle trafficking machinery genes. These findings reveal a previously unrecognized mechanism by which DENV hijacks RTN3S to promote the formation of infectious exosomes, thereby facilitating viral dissemination and immune evasion. 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Integrative Mechanistic Studies Identify Reticulon-3 as a Critical Modulator of Infectious Exosome-Driven Dengue Pathogenesis.
The dengue virus (DENV) exploits host cell exosome pathways to disseminate and evade immunity. However, the host factors enabling this process remain poorly defined. Here, we demonstrate that DENV infection robustly induces expression of the short isoform of Reticulon 3 (RTN3S) in hepatic (Huh7) and monocytic cells, and that RTN3S is a critical driver of infectious exosome biogenesis. RTN3S physically associates with double-stranded viral RNA and the DENV non-structural protein 3 (NS3) in infected cells, indicating its integration into the viral replication complex. Loss of RTN3 markedly reduced exosome production and the exosomal export of viral RNA and proteins, demonstrating that RTN3S is required for efficient exosome-mediated viral release. Conversely, overexpression of full-length RTN3S dramatically increased the release of infectious virus-containing exosomes; truncation of the RTN3S C-terminal domain abolished this enhancement, confirming the essential role of the C-terminus in RTN3S's pro-viral exosomal function. In DENV-infected monocytes, we observed a shift toward a CD16-positive intermediate phenotype, accompanied by the upregulation of genes involved in vesicle biogenesis and stress response. These infected monocytes also secreted higher levels of inflammatory cytokines. Similarly, monocytes from Dengue patients exhibited high RTN3 expression, which correlated with an expansion of intermediate (CD16+) subsets and enriched expression of vesicle trafficking machinery genes. These findings reveal a previously unrecognized mechanism by which DENV hijacks RTN3S to promote the formation of infectious exosomes, thereby facilitating viral dissemination and immune evasion. RTN3S thus represents a novel element of the Dengue pathogenesis and a potential target for host-directed antiviral strategies.
期刊介绍:
Viruses (ISSN 1999-4915) is an open access journal which provides an advanced forum for studies of viruses. It publishes reviews, regular research papers, communications, conference reports and short notes. Our aim is to encourage scientists to publish their experimental and theoretical results in as much detail as possible. There is no restriction on the length of the papers. The full experimental details must be provided so that the results can be reproduced. We also encourage the publication of timely reviews and commentaries on topics of interest to the virology community and feature highlights from the virology literature in the ''News and Views'' section. Electronic files or software regarding the full details of the calculation and experimental procedure, if unable to be published in a normal way, can be deposited as supplementary material.