| Literature DB >> 28281680 |
Isabel Pagani1, Silvia Ghezzi1, Adele Ulisse2, Alicia Rubio3, Filippo Turrini1, Elisabetta Garavaglia4, Massimo Candiani4,5, Concetta Castilletti6, Giuseppe Ippolito6, Guido Poli5,7, Vania Broccoli8, Paola Panina-Bordignon2, Elisa Vicenzi1.
Abstract
Zika virus (ZIKV) is a recently re-emerged flavivirus transmitted to humans by mosquito bites but also from mother to fetus and by sexual intercourse. We here show that primary human endometrial stromal cells (HESC) are highly permissive to ZIKV infection and support its in vitro replication. ZIKV envelope expression was detected in the endoplasmic reticulum whereas double-stranded viral RNA colocalized with vimentin filaments to the perinuclear region. ZIKV productive infection also occurred in the human T-HESC cell line together with the induction of interferon-β (IFN-β) and of IFN-stimulated genes. Notably, in vitro decidualization of T-HESC with cyclic AMP and progesterone upregulated the cell surface expression of the ZIKV entry co-receptor AXL and boosted ZIKV replication by ca. 100-fold. Thus, endometrial stromal cells, particularly if decidualized, likely represent a crucial cell target of ZIKV reaching them, either via the uterine vasculature in the viremic phase of the infection or by sexual viral transmission, and a potential source of virus spreading to placental trophoblasts during pregnancy.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28281680 PMCID: PMC5345097 DOI: 10.1038/srep44286
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Primary HESC are permissive to ZIKV productive infection.
(a) Immunostaining for ZIKV dsRNA and E protein of primary HESC infected with MR766 and INMI-1 ZIKV strains 72 h post-infection; Hoechst was used to stain nuclei. (b) Bar graph represents the mean ± SEM values determined from 10 fields of view for each donor (n = 2). P value was calculated by a paired Student’s t-test using the arcsine tranformation of the data.
Figure 2MR766 infection of unstimulated and decidualized T-HESC cell line.
(a) T-HESC (left) and decidualized (d) T-HESC (right) were stained with ZIKV anti-dsRNA or E protein mAbs whereas the nuclei were stained with Hoechst. (b) Surface expression of AXL (red) and MER (blue) in T-HESC (left) and dT-HESC (right) was determined in uninfected cells by flow cytometry. The histograms of one experiment representative of 3 independently performed are shown. Double immunostaining for ZIKV E protein and calreticulin (c) or dsRNA and vimentin (d) in dT-HESC either uninfected or infected with MR766 at 72 h post-infection; Hoechst was used to stain nuclei. Arrows indicate localization of E protein in areas occupied by calreticulin.
Figure 3ZIKV replication and cytopathicity.
(a) Kinetics of MR766 replication (left) and INMI-1 (right) in T-HESC (blue) and dT-HESC (red) were measured by retrotitration of culture supernatants on Vero cells by PFA. Mean ± SEM of 3 independent experiments is reported. (b) Kinetics of cell death were measured by the activity of cell-associated adenylate kinase (AK) released in cell culture supernatants from T-HESC (left) and dT-HESC (right). Two-way ANOVA with Bonferroni post-tests was used. *Represents statistical comparison between the viral strains and uninfected cultures (****p < 0.0001; ***p < 0.001; **p < 0.01; *p < 0.05).
Figure 4ZIKV induction of IFN-β and ISG expression in T-HESC and dT-HESC.
Time course of IFN-β mRNA (a), MXA (b) and OAS2 (c) expression in T-HESC (left) and dT-HESC (right) quantified by RT-qPCR. The results are expressed as the fold induction of transcripts in ZIKV-infected cells relative to those of uninfected cells. The results of one experiment representative of 3 independently conducted are shown.