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Title: Cardiac cell-specific apoptotic and cytokine responses to reovirus infection: determinants of myocarditic phenotype. Author: Miyamoto SD, Brown RD, Robinson BA, Tyler KL, Long CS, Debiasi RL. Journal: J Card Fail; 2009 Aug; 15(6):529-39. PubMed ID: 19643365. Abstract: BACKGROUND: The pathophysiologic mechanisms underlying viral myocarditis are not well defined. As a result, effective treatments do not exist and viral myocarditis remains a potentially lethal infection of the heart. METHODS AND RESULTS: We used cultured rat cardiac myocytes and fibroblasts to investigate apoptosis and cytokine production in response to infection by myocarditic vs. non-myocarditic strains of reovirus. Myocarditic reovirus strain 8B and non-myocarditic strain DB188 replicate comparably in each cardiac cell type. However, strain 8B and related myocarditic reoviruses preferentially increase apoptosis of myocytes relative to fibroblasts, whereas DB188 and nonmyocarditic strains preferentially increase fibroblast apoptosis. Infection of cardiac fibroblasts with the nonmyocarditic strain DB188 elicits substantial increases in a panel of cytokines compared to fibroblasts infected with strain 8B or mock-infected controls. Analysis of culture supernatants using cytometric bead arrays revealed that DB188 enhanced release of interleukin (IL)-1beta, IL-4, IL-6, IL-10, IL-12(p70), GRO-KC, tumor necrosis factor-alpha, and MCP-1 relative to 8B or mock-infected controls (all P < .05). CONCLUSION: We hypothesize that differential cytokine production and cell-specific apoptosis are important determinants of myocarditic potential of reoviral strains. Therapies that target the beneficial effects of cytokines in limiting cytopathic damage may offer an effective and novel treatment approach to viral myocarditis.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]