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Memórias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz
Fundação Oswaldo Cruz, Fiocruz
ISSN: 1678-8060 EISSN: 1678-8060
Vol. 91, Num. 2, 1996, pp. 255-256
Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz, Rio de Janeiro, Vol. 91(1), Mar/Apr 1996

RESEARCH NOTE: Ultrastructural Aspects of the Replication of Dengue Virus Type 2 Isolated in Brazil

Ortrud Monika Barth^+, Luzia MC Cortes, Jose Farias Filho, Hermann G Schatzmayr

Departamento de Virologia, Instituto Oswaldo Cruz, Av Brasil 4365, 21045-900 Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brasil

Code Number: OC96050
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Key words: Flaviviridae - dengue-2 - ultrastructure

The first outbreak of dengue fever in Brazil, confirmed by laboratory in Rio de Janeiro area, was registered in 1986. The virus isolates were characterized as dengue virus serotype 1 (DEN-1) (HG Schatzmayr et al. 1986 Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz 81: 245-246). Four years later, an outbreak of dengue virus serotype 2 (DEN-2) ocurred in the same area (RMR Nogueira et al. 1990 Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz 85: 253); enhancement of virulence was observed in only a few cases (Nogueira et al. 1991 Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz 86: 269). Recently a DEN-2 outbreak in Fortaleza, State of Ceara, was followed by another one in the southern coast of State of Bahia (data from Fundac o Nacional de Saude, Ministerio da Saude, Brasilia, 1995). Many thousand of cases were notified during all these outbreaks, and some dengue virus isolated were studied by electron microscopy.

We have studied the virus replication in the C6/36 Aedes albopictus cell line at the ultrastructural level of the DEN-1 virus strains isolated in Rio de Janeiro (OM Barth, HG Schatzmayr 1992 Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz 87: 1-7), as well as the DEN-2 virus later obtained in the same area, comparing with the New Guinea C DEN-2 reference strain (OM Barth 1991 Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz 86: 123-124, Barth 1992 Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz 87: 565-574, Barth et al. 1994 Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz 89: 21-24).

Our purpose here is to describe and compare ultrastructural aspects of DEN-2 virus replication in the C6/36 mosquito cell line of the two otbreaks in the states of Ceara and Bahia. Sera from four patients from Fortaleza (Ceara) and two from Eunapolis (Bahia) were isolated and typed previously as DEN-2 at the Laboratory of Flaviviruses, Department of Virology, Instituto Oswaldo Cruz (Nogueira et al. 1995 Rev Inst Med Trop S o Paulo submitted) by indirect immmunofluorescence test with type specific monoclonal antibodies. Cells were inoculated with 50 ul of the original human sera containing virus and maintained at

28 C in Leibovitz-15 medium. Showing 30-50% of cytopathic effect, the cell cultures were fixed in glutaraldehyde and processed as described previously (Barth et al. 1994 loc. cit.). Ultrathin sections were observed with a Zeiss EM-900 electron microscope. At least 50 cells were analyzed for virus replication in each sample.

The Brazilian DEN-2 virus replication in mosquito cell cultures of all examined sera present some peculiar morphological aspects, when compared with the reference New Guinea C strain. Typical featured virus particles, that occur in great number inside the rough endoplasmatic reticulum (RER) and derived vesicles after about three days of inoculation, are observed at high magnification in ultrathin sections and present always a smooth surface (Fig. 1); small granules on the virus particle surfaces can be observed by the negative staining technique at higher magnifications, corresponding to the virus membrane and envelope proteins (Fig. 2 arrow).

Beside these classical structured DEN-2 virus particles, virus- like particles occur in the RER and derived vesicles, also with the isolates of patient sera from State of Rio de Janeiro, but not in the cells infected with the reference New Guinea C strain. These particles, characterized by a fuzzy coated surface, are less numerous but persistent just to the 5th passage level in cells (Barth et al. 1994 loc. cit.). Cell controls were always free from these particles, as well as the same cell line infected by DEN-1 viruses. No antibodies, that may be engulfed by the cells during endocytosis, were found inside the infected cells; this means that the last described particles are not virus particles covered by antibodies.

Human sera from Fortaleza and Eunapolis cities, show the same morphological aspects of the virus particles as described for DEN-2 from Rio de Janeiro (Fig. 3). Classical structured virus particles occur beside the fuzzy coated ones in the same RER vesicles. Smooth membrane structures, as rounded vesicles and tubules of unknown function, are also present inside the RER and appear when virus replication is starting in the infected cell.

These observations suggest that the DEN-2 strains isolated in Fortaleza and Eunapolis cities are derived from the Rio de Janeiro outbreak, first noticed in 1990. No additional modifications at the morphological level in the virus infected cells were detected.

Financial support: CNPq and Fundac o Banco do Brasil

^+Corresponding author. Fax: 55-21-230.7638

Received 16 August 1995
Accepted 31 October 1995

Fig. 1: typical structured dengue virus particles (V) inside vesicles originated from the rough endoplasmatic reticulum (RER), 80,000x. Fig. 2: DEN-2 virus particles from a gradient fraction; negative staining; inset: virus particles in underfocus to show surface granulations (arrow), 200,000x. Fig. 3: smooth (arrow) and fuzzy-coated (arrow head) virus particles and smooth membrane structures (SMS) inside RER vesicles from a Bahia isolate, 80,000x. (Bar = 100 nm).

Copyright 1996 Fundacao Oswaldo Cruz


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