Summary.
Serious vascular leakage is central to the pathogenesis of hantavirus infections. However, there is no evidence suggesting the hantavirus infection of endothelial cells directly causes obvious cell damage or morphological alteration either in vivo or in vitro. In this study, we examined whether Hantaan virus (HTNV) infection modifies the barrier function of endothelial cell monolayers upon the exposure to pro-inflammatory cytokines. Low levels (1 ng/ml) of tumor necrosis factor-alpha initially increased the permeability in both HTNV-infected and uninfected monolayers similarly. Thereafter, however, these monolayers showed significant difference. The HTNV-infected monolayers remained irreversibly hyper-permeable during the experimental period up to 4 days, while the uninfected monolayers completely recovered the barrier function. The prolonged hyper-permeability of HTNV-infected monolayers was not associated with cell death or gap formation in the monolayers, and was independent from their nitric oxide or prostaglandin production. These results are the first evidence that hantavirus infection modifies barrier function of endothelial cell monolayers and suggest that HTNV-infection of endothelial cells may contribute to the increased vascular leakage through the prolonged response to cytokines.
Article PDF
Similar content being viewed by others
Avoid common mistakes on your manuscript.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Niikura, M., Maeda, A., Ikegami, T. et al. Modification of endothelial cell functions by Hantaan virus infection: prolonged hyper-permeability induced by TNF-alpha of hantaan virus-infected endothelial cell monolayers. Arch Virol 149, 1279–1292 (2004). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00705-004-0306-y
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
Issue Date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00705-004-0306-y