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Aggravation of viral hepatitis by platelet-derived serotonin
Authors:Lang Philipp A  Contaldo Claudio  Georgiev Panco  El-Badry Ashraf Mohammad  Recher Mike  Kurrer Michael  Cervantes-Barragan Luisa  Ludewig Burkhard  Calzascia Thomas  Bolinger Beatrice  Merkler Doron  Odermatt Bernhard  Bader Michael  Graf Rolf  Clavien Pierre-Alain  Hegazy Ahmed N  Löhning Max  Harris Nicola L  Ohashi Pamela S  Hengartner Hans  Zinkernagel Rolf M  Lang Karl S
Institution:Institute of Experimental Immunology, University Hospital of Zurich, Schmelzberstrasse 12, CH-8091 Zurich, Switzerland.
Abstract:More than 500 million people worldwide are persistently infected with hepatitis B virus or hepatitis C virus. Although both viruses are poorly cytopathic, persistence of either virus carries a risk of chronic liver inflammation, potentially resulting in liver steatosis, liver cirrhosis, end-stage liver failure or hepatocellular carcinoma. Virus-specific T cells are a major determinant of the outcome of hepatitis, as they contribute to the early control of chronic hepatitis viruses, but they also mediate immunopathology during persistent virus infection. We have analyzed the role of platelet-derived vasoactive serotonin during virus-induced CD8(+) T cell-dependent immunopathological hepatitis in mice infected with the noncytopathic lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus. After virus infection, platelets were recruited to the liver, and their activation correlated with severely reduced sinusoidal microcirculation, delayed virus elimination and increased immunopathological liver cell damage. Lack of platelet-derived serotonin in serotonin-deficient mice normalized hepatic microcirculatory dysfunction, accelerated virus clearance in the liver and reduced CD8(+) T cell-dependent liver cell damage. In keeping with these observations, serotonin treatment of infected mice delayed entry of activated CD8(+) T cells into the liver, delayed virus control and aggravated immunopathological hepatitis. Thus, vasoactive serotonin supports virus persistence in the liver and aggravates virus-induced immunopathology.
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