Cells (Oct 2024)

Acute Chikungunya Infection Induces Vascular Dysfunction by Directly Disrupting Redox Signaling in Endothelial Cells

  • José Teles de Oliveira-Neto,
  • Juliano de P. Souza,
  • Daniel Rodrigues,
  • Mirele R. Machado,
  • Juliano V. Alves,
  • Paula R. Barros,
  • Alecsander F. Bressan,
  • Josiane F. Silva,
  • Tiago J. Costa,
  • Rafael M. Costa,
  • Daniella Bonaventura,
  • Eurico de Arruda-Neto,
  • Rita C. Tostes,
  • Emiliana P. Abrão

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cells13211770
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 21
p. 1770

Abstract

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Chikungunya virus (CHIKV) infection is characterized by febrile illness, severe joint pain, myalgia, and cardiovascular complications. Given that CHIKV stimulates reactive oxygen species (ROS) and pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokines, events that disrupt vascular homeostasis, we hypothesized that CHIKV induces arterial dysfunction by directly impacting redox-related mechanisms in vascular cells. Wild-type (WT) and iNOS knockout (iNOS−/−) mice were administered either CHIKV (1.0 × 106 PFU/µL) or Mock vehicle via the intracaudal route. In vivo, CHIKV infection induced vascular dysfunction (assessed by a wire myograph), decreased systolic blood pressure (tail-cuff plethysmography), increased IL-6 and IFN-γ, but not TNF-α levels (determined by ELISA), and increased protein content by Western blot. Marked contractile hyporesponsiveness to phenylephrine was observed 48 h post-infection, which was restored by endothelium removal. L-NAME, 1400W, Tiron, and iNOS gene deletion prevented phenylephrine hyporesponsiveness. CHIKV infection increased vascular nitrite concentration (Griess reaction) and superoxide anion (O2•−) generation (lucigenin chemiluminescence), and decreased hydrogen peroxide (H2O2, by Amplex Red) levels 48 h post-infection, alongside increased TBARS levels. In vitro, CHIKV infected endothelial cells (EA.hy926) and upregulated ICAM-1 and iNOS protein expression (determined by Western blot). These data support the conclusion that CHIKV-induced alterations in vascular ROS/NF-kB/iNOS/NO signaling potentially contribute to cardiovascular events associated with Chikungunya infection.

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