PLoS ONE (Jun 2007)

Human muscle satellite cells as targets of Chikungunya virus infection.

  • Simona Ozden,
  • Michel Huerre,
  • Jean-Pierre Riviere,
  • Lark L Coffey,
  • Philippe V Afonso,
  • Vincent Mouly,
  • Jean de Monredon,
  • Jean-Christophe Roger,
  • Mohamed El Amrani,
  • Jean-Luc Yvin,
  • Marie-Christine Jaffar,
  • Marie-Pascale Frenkiel,
  • Marion Sourisseau,
  • Olivier Schwartz,
  • Gillian Butler-Browne,
  • Philippe Desprès,
  • Antoine Gessain,
  • Pierre-Emmanuel Ceccaldi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0000527
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 6
p. e527

Abstract

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BackgroundChikungunya (CHIK) virus is a mosquito-transmitted alphavirus that causes in humans an acute infection characterised by fever, polyarthralgia, head-ache, and myalgia. Since 2005, the emergence of CHIK virus was associated with an unprecedented magnitude outbreak of CHIK disease in the Indian Ocean. Clinically, this outbreak was characterized by invalidating poly-arthralgia, with myalgia being reported in 97.7% of cases. Since the cellular targets of CHIK virus in humans are unknown, we studied the pathogenic events and targets of CHIK infection in skeletal muscle.Methodology/principal findingsImmunohistology on muscle biopsies from two CHIK virus-infected patients with myositic syndrome showed that viral antigens were found exclusively inside skeletal muscle progenitor cells (designed as satelllite cells), and not in muscle fibers. To evaluate the ability of CHIK virus to replicate in human satellite cells, we assessed virus infection on primary human muscle cells; viral growth was observed in CHIK virus-infected satellite cells with a cytopathic effect, whereas myotubes were essentially refractory to infection.Conclusions/significanceThis report provides new insights into CHIK virus pathogenesis, since it is the first to identify a cellular target of CHIK virus in humans and to report a selective infection of muscle satellite cells by a viral agent in humans.