| Literature DB >> 29590202 |
Matthew T Aliota1, Dawn M Dudley2, Christina M Newman2, James Weger-Lucarelli3, Laurel M Stewart2, Michelle R Koenig2, Meghan E Breitbach2, Andrea M Weiler4, Matthew R Semler2, Gabrielle L Barry4, Katie R Zarbock4, Amelia K Haj2, Ryan V Moriarty4, Mariel S Mohns2, Emma L Mohr5, Vanessa Venturi6, Nancy Schultz-Darken4, Eric Peterson4, Wendy Newton4, Michele L Schotzko4, Heather A Simmons4, Andres Mejia4, Jennifer M Hayes4, Saverio Capuano4, Miles P Davenport6, Thomas C Friedrich1,4, Gregory D Ebel3, Shelby L O'Connor2,4, David H O'Connor2,4.
Abstract
Defining the complex dynamics of Zika virus (ZIKV) infection in pregnancy and during transmission between vertebrate hosts and mosquito vectors is critical for a thorough understanding of viral transmission, pathogenesis, immune evasion, and potential reservoir establishment. Within-host viral diversity in ZIKV infection is low, which makes it difficult to evaluate infection dynamics. To overcome this biological hurdle, we constructed a molecularly barcoded ZIKV. This virus stock consists of a "synthetic swarm" whose members are genetically identical except for a run of eight consecutive degenerate codons, which creates approximately 64,000 theoretical nucleotide combinations that all encode the same amino acids. Deep sequencing this region of the ZIKV genome enables counting of individual barcodes to quantify the number and relative proportions of viral lineages present within a host. Here we used these molecularly barcoded ZIKV variants to study the dynamics of ZIKV infection in pregnant and non-pregnant macaques as well as during mosquito infection/transmission. The barcoded virus had no discernible fitness defects in vivo, and the proportions of individual barcoded virus templates remained stable throughout the duration of acute plasma viremia. ZIKV RNA also was detected in maternal plasma from a pregnant animal infected with barcoded virus for 67 days. The complexity of the virus population declined precipitously 8 days following infection of the dam, consistent with the timing of typical resolution of ZIKV in non-pregnant macaques and remained low for the subsequent duration of viremia. Our approach showed that synthetic swarm viruses can be used to probe the composition of ZIKV populations over time in vivo to understand vertical transmission, persistent reservoirs, bottlenecks, and evolutionary dynamics.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29590202 PMCID: PMC5891079 DOI: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1006964
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Pathog ISSN: 1553-7366 Impact factor: 6.823
Number of viral templates used to characterize the full genome sequences of the two ZIKV stocks.
| Sample | Number of vRNA templates put into the cDNA synthesis reaction | Number of cDNA templates put into the PCR reaction |
|---|---|---|
| ZIKV-IC stock | 1 x 106 | 119,048 |
| ZIKV-BC-1.0 | 1 x 106 | 119,048 |
*The number of cDNA templates was calculated based on the number of vRNA templates that were put into the cDNA synthesis reaction, and then the amount of cDNA that was used for the PCR reaction.
Fig 2Longitudinal detection of Zika vRNA in plasma from animals inoculated with ZIKV-PR (blue), ZIKV-IC (yellow), or ZIKV-BC-1.0 (magenta).
Zika vRNA copies per ml blood plasma. The y-axis crosses the x-axis at the limit of quantification of the qRT-PCR assay (100 vRNA copies/ml).
Number of viral templates sequenced from nonpregnant animals infected with ZIKV-IC or ZIKV-BC-1.0.
| Sample | Number of vRNA templates put into the cDNA synthesis reaction | Number of theoretical cDNA templates put into the PCR reaction |
|---|---|---|
| 296198 (ZIKV-IC) day 3 | 5255 | 626 |
| 296198 (ZIKV-IC) day 5 | 232,553 | 88,592 |
| 118693 (ZIKV-IC) day 3 | 1201 | 143 |
| 962498 (ZIKV-IC) day 3 | 3514 | 418 |
| 962498 (ZIKV-IC) day 5 | 4208 | 1,603 |
| 514982 (ZIKV-BC-1.0) day 2 | 146 | 14 |
| 715132 (ZIKV-BC-1.0) day 3 | 2865 | 341 |
| 715132 (ZIKV-BC-1.0) day 5 | 2821 | 1075 |
| 688387 (ZIKV-BC-1.0) day 3 | 667 | 79 |
| 688387 (ZIKV-BC-1.0) day 5 | 1526 | 581 |
*The number of cDNA templates was calculated based on the number of vRNA templates that were put into the cDNA synthesis reaction, and then the amount of cDNA that was used for the PCR reaction.
Number of viral templates sequenced from animal 776301 who was infected with ZIKV-BC-1.0.
| Day | Number of vRNA templates put into the cDNA synthesis reaction | Number of theoretical cDNA templates put into the PCR reaction |
|---|---|---|
| 3 | 6577 | 2975 |
| 5 | 218,813 | 98,987 |
| 7 | 11231 | 5081 |
| 8 | 601 | 272 |
| 10 | 443 | 200 |
| 15 | 258 | 117 |
| 18 | 91 | 41 |
| 22 | 78 | 33 |
| 25 | 61 | 28 |
| 29 | 135 | 56 |
| 32 | 100 | 45 |
| 36 | 22 | 10 |
| 39 | 67 | 30 |
| 43 | 104 | 43 |
| 46 | 74 | 33 |
| 50 | 19 | 6 |
| 57 | 24 | 7 |
| 60 | 49 | 15 |
| 67 | 12 | 4 |
*The number of cDNA templates was calculated based on the number of vRNA templates that were put into the cDNA synthesis reaction, and then the amount of cDNA that was used for the PCR reaction.
Number of viral templates sequenced from one positive mosquito who fed on 776301.
| Sample | Number of vRNA templates put into the cDNA synthesis reaction | Number of theoretical cDNA templates put into the PCR reaction |
|---|---|---|
| Mosquito saliva | 2830 | 1280 |
| Mosquito body | 10,000 | 4,524 |
| Mosquito legs | 10,000 | 4,524 |
*The number of cDNA templates was calculated based on the number of vRNA templates that were put into the cDNA synthesis reaction, and then the amount of cDNA that was used for the PCR reaction.
Fig 6Sequencing of the molecular barcode isolated from pregnant animal 776301.
Viral RNA was isolated from animal 776301 at the indicated time points. The theoretical number of cDNA molecules used in each PCR reaction is shown in Table 3. For each sample, a single preparation of cDNA was made and then split into two separate PCR reactions with primer set A (178 bp) and B (131bp). PCR products were tagged and sequenced. A.) The frequency of each barcode in the population is shown for ZIKV-BC-1.0 inoculum and the animal 776301. The frequency of the wild type sequence in the region of the barcode is shown as Zika_WT. The frequency of any sequence in the region of the barcode that was not considered authentic is listed as ‘Other.’ B.) The number of authentic barcodes detected in animal 776301 were counted for each sample and the data for each individual replicate are shown. C.) Average genetic complexity at the barcode positions measured by Simpson’s diversity index. Closed symbols represent Simpson’s diversity index in replicate A samples and open symbols represent Simpson’s diversity index in replicate B.
Vector competence of Aedes aegypti following peroral exposure to ZIKV-BC-1.0-infected pregnant macaque 4 days post inoculation.
| 7 days post feeding | 13 days post feeding | 25 days post feeding | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
I, % Infected; D, % Disseminated; T, % Transmitting