Skip to main content
International Journal of Experimental Pathology logoLink to International Journal of Experimental Pathology
. 1996 Apr;77(2):45–51. doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2613.1996.962100.x

Dengue virus-induced cytotoxin releases nitrite by spleen cells

RUMA MUKERJEE 0, ANITA MISRA 0, UC CHATURVEDI 0
PMCID: PMC2691624  PMID: 8762862

Abstract

Dengue type-2 virus (DV) infection in mice induces T cells to produce a cytokine, the cytotoxic factor (CF), which induces H2-A positive macrophages to produce another cytokine, cyotoxin (CF2), which amplifies its cytotoxic effects on target cells. The present study was undertaken to investigate the production of nitrite (NO2) by the spleen cells of mice in vitro and in vivo following inoculation of CF2. Maximum NO2 production occurred at 1 hour after inoculation of 100 μg CF2. Pretreatment of CF2 with anti-CF2-antisera (CF2-As) inhibited the production of NO2. Pretreatment of the spleen cells with NG-monomethyl- l-arginine (NMA) or with arginase inhibited NO2 production. The NO2 production was diminished in a dose dependent manner by treatment of spleen cells with the Ca2+ channel blocking drug, nifedipine and Zn2+ as ZnSO4. The findings of the present study thus demonstrate that CF2 induces production of NO2 in the spleen cells in a CA2+-dependent manner which may be a mechanism of target cell killing.

Keywords: dengue virus, cytotoxic cytokine, nitrite, cytotoxicity

Full Text

The Full Text of this article is available as a PDF (458.0 KB).


Articles from International Journal of Experimental Pathology are provided here courtesy of Wiley

RESOURCES