PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases (Jul 2020)

Annexin A2 depletion exacerbates the intracerebral microhemorrhage induced by acute rickettsia and Ebola virus infections.

  • Zhengchen Su,
  • Qing Chang,
  • Aleksandra Drelich,
  • Thomas Shelite,
  • Barbara Judy,
  • Yakun Liu,
  • Jie Xiao,
  • Changchen Zhou,
  • Xi He,
  • Yang Jin,
  • Tais Saito,
  • Shaojun Tang,
  • Lynn Soong,
  • Maki Wakamiya,
  • Xiang Fang,
  • Alexander Bukreyev,
  • Thomas Ksiazek,
  • William K Russell,
  • Bin Gong

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0007960
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 7
p. e0007960

Abstract

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Intracerebral microhemorrhages (CMHs) are small foci of hemorrhages in the cerebrum. Acute infections induced by some intracellular pathogens, including rickettsia, can result in CMHs. Annexin a2 (ANXA2) has been documented to play a functional role during intracellular bacterial adhesion. Here we report that ANXA2-knockout (KO) mice are more susceptible to CMHs in response to rickettsia and Ebola virus infections, suggesting an essential role of ANXA2 in protecting vascular integrity during these intracellular pathogen infections. Proteomic analysis via mass spectrometry of whole brain lysates and brain-derived endosomes from ANXA2-KO and wild-type (WT) mice post-infection with R. australis revealed that a variety of significant proteins were differentially expressed, and the follow-up function enrichment analysis had identified several relevant cell-cell junction functions. Immunohistology study confirmed that both infected WT and infected ANXA2-KO mice were subjected to adherens junctional protein (VE-cadherin) damages. However, key blood-brain barrier (BBB) components, tight junctional proteins ZO-1 and occludin, were disorganized in the brains from R. australis-infected ANXA2-KO mice, but not those of infected WT mice. Similar ANXA2-KO dependent CMHs and fragments of ZO-1 and occludin were also observed in Ebola virus-infected ANXA2-KO mice, but not found in infected WT mice. Overall, our study revealed a novel role of ANXA2 in the formation of CMHs during R. australis and Ebola virus infections; and the underlying mechanism is relevant to the role of ANXA2-regulated tight junctions and its role in stabilizing the BBB in these deadly infections.