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dc.creatorFrakolaki E., Kaimou P., Moraiti M., Kalliampakou K.I., Karampetsou K., Dotsika E., Liakos P., Vassilacopoulou D., Mavromara P., Bartenschlager R., Vassilaki N.en
dc.date.accessioned2023-01-31T07:38:56Z
dc.date.available2023-01-31T07:38:56Z
dc.date.issued2018
dc.identifier10.3390/cells7120241
dc.identifier.issn20734409
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11615/71797
dc.description.abstractLow oxygen tension exerts a profound effect on the replication of several DNA and RNA viruses. In vitro propagation of Dengue virus (DENV) has been conventionally studied under atmospheric oxygen levels despite that in vivo, the tissue microenvironment is hypoxic. Here, we compared the efficiency of DENV replication in liver cells, monocytes, and epithelial cells under hypoxic and normoxic conditions, investigated the ability of DENV to induce a hypoxia response and metabolic reprogramming and determined the underlying molecular mechanism. In DENV-infected cells, hypoxia had no effect on virus entry and RNA translation, but enhanced RNA replication. Overexpression and silencing approaches as well as chemical inhibition and energy substrate exchanging experiments showed that hypoxia-mediated enhancement of DENV replication depends on the activation of the key metabolic regulators hypoxia-inducible factors 1α/2α (HIF-1α/2α) and the serine/threonine kinase AKT. Enhanced RNA replication correlates directly with an increase in anaerobic glycolysis producing elevated ATP levels. Additionally, DENV activates HIF and anaerobic glycolysis markers. Finally, reactive oxygen species were shown to contribute, at least in part through HIF, both to the hypoxia-mediated increase of DENV replication and to virus-induced hypoxic reprogramming. These suggest that DENV manipulates hypoxia response and oxygen-dependent metabolic reprogramming for efficient viral replication. © 2018 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.en
dc.language.isoenen
dc.sourceCellsen
dc.source.urihttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85090698517&doi=10.3390%2fcells7120241&partnerID=40&md5=6f04f9bc40be736925f7b920104e114e
dc.subjectadenosine triphosphateen
dc.subjectglucose transporter 1en
dc.subjecthexokinaseen
dc.subjecthypoxia inducible factor 1alphaen
dc.subjecthypoxia inducible factor 2alphaen
dc.subjectlactate dehydrogenaseen
dc.subjectprotein serine threonine kinaseen
dc.subjectvasculotropin Aen
dc.subjectanaerobic glycolysisen
dc.subjectanimal cellen
dc.subjectArticleen
dc.subjectbioenergyen
dc.subjectcontrolled studyen
dc.subjectDengue virusen
dc.subjectdown regulationen
dc.subjectfluorescence activated cell sortingen
dc.subjectgene expressionen
dc.subjectgenetic transcriptionen
dc.subjectgenetic transfectionen
dc.subjecthumanen
dc.subjecthuman cellen
dc.subjecthypoxiaen
dc.subjectluciferase assayen
dc.subjectnonhumanen
dc.subjectoxygen tissue levelen
dc.subjectplasmiden
dc.subjectprotein expressionen
dc.subjectprotein phosphorylationen
dc.subjectreverse transcription polymerase chain reactionen
dc.subjectRNA replicationen
dc.subjectupregulationen
dc.subjectviral plaque assayen
dc.subjectvirus entryen
dc.subjectvirus replicationen
dc.subjectvirus titrationen
dc.subjectWestern blottingen
dc.subjectMDPIen
dc.titleThe role of tissue oxygen tension in dengue virus replicationen
dc.typejournalArticleen


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