Microvascular injury is considered an initial event in the pathogenesis of scleroderma and endothelial cells are suspected of being the target of the autoimmune process seen in the disease. EBV has long been proposed as a trigger for autoimmune diseases, including scleroderma. Nevertheless, its contribution to the pathogenic process remains poorly understood. In this study, we report that EBV lytic antigens are detected in scleroderma dermal vessels, suggesting that endothelial cells might represent a target for EBV infection in scleroderma skin. We show that EBV DNA load is remarkably increased in peripheral blood, plasma and circulating monocytes from scleroderma patients compared to healthy EBV carriers, and that monocytes represent the prominent subsets of EBV-infected cells in scleroderma. Given that monocytes have the capacity to adhere to the endothelium, we then investigated whether monocyte-associated EBV could infect primary human endothelial cells. We demonstrated that endothelial cells are infectable by EBV, using human monocytes bound to recombinant EBV as a shuttle, even though cell-free virus failed to infect them. We show that EBV induces activation of TLR9 innate immune response and markers of vascular injury in infected endothelial cells and that up-regulation is associated with the expression of EBV lytic genes in infected cells. EBV innate immune modulation suggests a novel mechanism mediating inflammation, by which EBV triggers endothelial cell and vascular injury in scleroderma. In addition, our data point to up-regulation of EBV DNA loads as potential biomarker in developing vasculopathy in scleroderma. These findings provide the framework for the development of novel therapeutic interventions to shift the scleroderma treatment paradigm towards antiviral therapies.

Innate immune modulation induced by EBV lytic infection promotes endothelial cell inflammation and vascular injury in scleroderma / Farina, Antonella; Rosato, Edoardo; York, Michael; E., Benjamin; Trojanowska, Maria; Alessandra Farina, Giuseppina. - In: FRONTIERS IN IMMUNOLOGY. - ISSN 1664-3224. - 12:(2021). [10.3389/fimmu.2021.651013]

Innate immune modulation induced by EBV lytic infection promotes endothelial cell inflammation and vascular injury in scleroderma

Antonella Farina
Investigation
;
Edoardo Rosato
Resources
;
2021

Abstract

Microvascular injury is considered an initial event in the pathogenesis of scleroderma and endothelial cells are suspected of being the target of the autoimmune process seen in the disease. EBV has long been proposed as a trigger for autoimmune diseases, including scleroderma. Nevertheless, its contribution to the pathogenic process remains poorly understood. In this study, we report that EBV lytic antigens are detected in scleroderma dermal vessels, suggesting that endothelial cells might represent a target for EBV infection in scleroderma skin. We show that EBV DNA load is remarkably increased in peripheral blood, plasma and circulating monocytes from scleroderma patients compared to healthy EBV carriers, and that monocytes represent the prominent subsets of EBV-infected cells in scleroderma. Given that monocytes have the capacity to adhere to the endothelium, we then investigated whether monocyte-associated EBV could infect primary human endothelial cells. We demonstrated that endothelial cells are infectable by EBV, using human monocytes bound to recombinant EBV as a shuttle, even though cell-free virus failed to infect them. We show that EBV induces activation of TLR9 innate immune response and markers of vascular injury in infected endothelial cells and that up-regulation is associated with the expression of EBV lytic genes in infected cells. EBV innate immune modulation suggests a novel mechanism mediating inflammation, by which EBV triggers endothelial cell and vascular injury in scleroderma. In addition, our data point to up-regulation of EBV DNA loads as potential biomarker in developing vasculopathy in scleroderma. These findings provide the framework for the development of novel therapeutic interventions to shift the scleroderma treatment paradigm towards antiviral therapies.
2021
EBV lytic cycle; inflammationa; vascular injury; monocyte; endothelial; systemic sclerosys
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Innate immune modulation induced by EBV lytic infection promotes endothelial cell inflammation and vascular injury in scleroderma / Farina, Antonella; Rosato, Edoardo; York, Michael; E., Benjamin; Trojanowska, Maria; Alessandra Farina, Giuseppina. - In: FRONTIERS IN IMMUNOLOGY. - ISSN 1664-3224. - 12:(2021). [10.3389/fimmu.2021.651013]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1538706
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