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Virology ; 332(2): 480-90, 2005 Feb 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15680413

ABSTRACT

Rotaviruses, which are the main cause of viral gastroenteritis in young children, induce structural and functional damages in infected mature enterocytes of the small intestine. To investigate a relationship between rotavirus infection and cell death by apoptosis, we used the human intestinal Caco-2 cell line. We demonstrated by several methods including TUNEL and ELISA detection of cytoplasmic histone-associated DNA fragments that the infection of fully differentiated Caco-2 cells by the RRV rotavirus strain induces apoptosis. Rotavirus infection leads to the loss of mitochondrial membrane potential and the release of cytochrome C from mitochondria. We showed that rotavirus-induced apoptosis was dependent of the multiplicity of infection and increased with time from 4 h to 24 h of infection. Flow cytometric analysis showed that DNA fragmentation occurs in productively infected cells, suggesting that rotavirus induces apoptosis by a direct mechanism. We also demonstrated that non-replicative RRV particles are not sufficient to induce apoptosis and viral gene expression seems required. Intracellular calcium plays a role in RRV-induced apoptosis because treatment with an intracellular calcium ion chelator (BAPTA-AM) partially inhibited apoptosis.


Subject(s)
Apoptosis/physiology , Rotavirus/pathogenicity , Adenocarcinoma , Annexin A5/metabolism , Cell Differentiation , Cell Line, Tumor , Colonic Neoplasms , Cytochromes c/analysis , Flow Cytometry , Humans , In Situ Nick-End Labeling , Membrane Potentials/physiology , Mitochondria/physiology
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