PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases (Jan 2012)

Dengue virus infection-enhancing activity in serum samples with neutralizing activity as determined by using FcγR-expressing cells.

  • Meng Ling Moi,
  • Chang-Kweng Lim,
  • Kaw Bing Chua,
  • Tomohiko Takasaki,
  • Ichiro Kurane

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0001536
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 2
p. e1536

Abstract

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BACKGROUND: Progress in dengue vaccine development has been hampered by limited understanding of protective immunity against dengue virus infection. Conventional neutralizing antibody titration assays that use FcγR-negative cells do not consider possible infection-enhancement activity. We reasoned that as FcγR-expressing cells are the major target cells of dengue virus, neutralizing antibody titration assays using FcγR-expressing cells that determine the sum of neutralizing and infection-enhancing activity, may better reflect the biological properties of antibodies in vivo. METHODS AND FINDINGS: We evaluated serum samples from 80 residents of a dengue endemic country, Malaysia, for neutralizing activity, and infection-enhancing activity at 1∶10 serum dilution by using FcγR-negative BHK cells and FcγR-expressing BHK cells. The serum samples consisted of a panel of patients with acute DENV infection (31%, 25/80) and a panel of donors without acute DENV infection (69%, 55/80). A high proportion of the tested serum samples (75%, 60/80) demonstrated DENV neutralizing activity (PRNT(50)≥10) and infection-enhancing activity. Eleven of 18 serum samples from patients with acute secondary DENV infection demonstrated neutralizing activity to the infecting serotype determined by using FcγR-negative BHK cells (PRNT(50)≥10), but not when determined by using FcγR-expressing cells. CONCLUSION: Human serum samples with low neutralizing activity determined by using FcγR-negative cells showed DENV infection-enhancing activity using FcγR-expressing cells, whereas those with high neutralizing activity determined by using FcγR-negative cells demonstrate low or no infection-enhancing activity using FcγR-expressing cells. The results suggest an inverse relationship between neutralizing antibody titer and infection-enhancing activity, and that neutralizing activity determined by using FcγR-expressing cells, and not the activity determined by using FcγR-negative cells, may better reflect protection to DENV infection in vivo.