| Literature DB >> 29724036 |
Ina Lee1, Sandra Bos2,3, Ge Li4, Shusheng Wang5, Gilles Gadea6, Philippe Desprès7, Richard Y Zhao8,9,10,11.
Abstract
The recent Zika virus (ZIKV) outbreak in the Americas surprised all of us because of its rapid spread and association with neurologic disorders including fetal microcephaly, brain and ocular anomalies, and Guillain⁻Barré syndrome. In response to this global health crisis, unprecedented and world-wide efforts are taking place to study the ZIKV-related human diseases. Much has been learned about this virus in the areas of epidemiology, genetic diversity, protein structures, and clinical manifestations, such as consequences of ZIKV infection on fetal brain development. However, progress on understanding the molecular mechanism underlying ZIKV-associated neurologic disorders remains elusive. To date, we still lack a good understanding of; (1) what virologic factors are involved in the ZIKV-associated human diseases; (2) which ZIKV protein(s) contributes to the enhanced viral pathogenicity; and (3) how do the newly adapted and pandemic ZIKV strains alter their interactions with the host cells leading to neurologic defects? The goal of this review is to explore the molecular insights into the ZIKV⁻host interactions with an emphasis on host cell receptor usage for viral entry, cell innate immunity to ZIKV, and the ability of ZIKV to subvert antiviral responses and to cause cytopathic effects. We hope this literature review will inspire additional molecular studies focusing on ZIKV⁻host Interactions.Entities:
Keywords: ZIKV-associated neurologic disorders; ZIKV–host interactions; antiviral responses; cell surface receptors; cytopathic effects; microcephaly; viral counteraction; viral pathogenesis; zika virus
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29724036 PMCID: PMC5977226 DOI: 10.3390/v10050233
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Viruses ISSN: 1999-4915 Impact factor: 5.048
Figure 1Schematic structure of the Zika virus genome. Each of the viral proteins is drawn based on the relative orientation in the RNA genome. The ZIKV viral protease, host protease and Furin protease are represented by different arrows, as shown. Each arrow points to the specific protease cleavage site. The numbers shown above each protein product indicate the start/end position. Abbreviations: anaC, anchored capsid protein C; C, capsid protein C; prM, precursor membrane protein; M, membrane protein; Pr, protein pr; E, envelope protein; NS, nonstructural protein; *, protease consists of N-terminal of NS3 and C-terminal NS2B as described in the text. C-terminal of NS3 encodes helicase; 2K, signal peptide 2K; NS5 encodes methyltransferase at its N-terminal end and RNA-dependent RNA (RdR) polymerase at its C-terminal end. UTR, untranslated region. The structures of 5′ UTR and 3′ UTR are based on [21]. The information of ZIKV protein products is based on [9].
Zika viral strains that are known to cause microcephaly or microcephaly-like phenotypes.
| ZIKV Strain | Model Used | Host/Location/Year | Microcephaly-Like Phenotypes | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Human fetal tissue or organoid models | ||||
| MR766 | Human brain-specific organoids | Rhesus monkey/Uganda/1947 | Increased cell death and reduced proliferation, resulting in decreased neuronal cell-layer volume resembling microcephaly. | [ |
| MR766 | Human neurospheres and organoids | Rhesus monkey/Uganda/1947 | Growth impairment of neurospheres and organoids | [ |
| MR766 | Human cerebral organoids | Rhesus monkey/Uganda/1947 | Reduction of organoid growth and volume reminiscent of microcephaly via induction of TLR3 | [ |
| FSS 13025 | Human brain-specific organoids | Human/Cambodia/2010 | Increased cell death and reduced proliferation, resulting in decreased neuronal cell-layer volume resembling microcephaly. | [ |
| ZIKV(BR) | Human organoids | Human/Brazil/2015 | Reduction of proliferative zones and disrupted cortical layers; induction of apoptosis, autophagy and impaired neurodevelopment | [ |
| KU527068 | Aborted human fetal brain | Human/Brazil/2016 | Microcephaly with calcification in the fetal brain and placenta | [ |
| FB_GWUH | Aborted human fetal brain | Human/USA/2016 | Fetal brain abnormalities with diffuse cerebral cortical thinning | [ |
| Mouse models | ||||
| PF/2013/KD507 | Mouse | Human/French Polynesia/2013 | Fetal demise or intrauterine growth restriction | [ |
| ZIKV(BR) | Mouse | Human/Brazil/2015 | Intrauterine growth restriction, including signs of microcephaly and vertical transmission | [ |
| SZ01 | Mouse vertical transmission | Human/Samoa/2016 | Infection of radial glia cells of dorsal ventricular zone of the fetuses resulting in reduced cavity of lateral ventricles and decreased cortical surface area | [ |
| SZ01 | Embryonic mouse brain | Human/Samoa/2016 | Cell cycle arrest, apoptosis, and inhibition of NPC differentiation, resulting in cortical thinning and microcephaly | [ |
| CAM/2010AndVEN/2016 | Neonatal mouse brain | Human/Cambodia/2010 | Neonatal ZIKV infection of VEN/2016 leads to more severe microcephaly than CAM/2010. VEN/2016 strain infection leads to stronger immune response, more severe calcification, more neuronal death and abolished oligodendrocyte development, but less activation of microglial cells. | [ |
Cellular targets and receptor usages.
| Primary Cell | Receptor | References | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Brain | |||
| Neural progenitor cells (NPCs) | AXL, TLR3 | [ | |
| Astroglial cells | AXL | [ | |
| Microglial cells | AXL | [ | |
| Placenta | |||
| Hofbauer cells | AXL, Tyro3, TIM1 | [ | |
| Trophoblasts | AXL, Tyro3, TIM1, TLR3, TLR8 | [ | |
| Endothelial cells | AXL, Tyro3, TIM1 | [ | |
| Skin | |||
| Dermal fibroblasts | AXL, TIM-1, TYRO3, TLR3, RIG-I, MDA5 | [ | |
| Epidermal keratinocytes | AXL, TIM-1, TYRO3, TLR3, RIG-I, MDA5 | [ | |
| Immune cells | |||
| Immature dendritic cells | DC-SIGN | [ | |
| Dendritic cells | DC-SIGN | [ | |
| CD14+ monocytes | Unknown | [ | |
| CD14+CD16+ monocytes | Unknown | [ | |
| Testis | |||
| Sertoli cell | AXL | [ | |
| Spermatozoa | Tyro3 | [ | |
| Kidney | |||
| Renal mesangial cell | Unknown | [ | |
| Glomerular podocytes | Unknown | ||
| Renal Glomerular Endothelial Cell | Unknown | ||
| Retina | |||
| Retinal pericytes | Tyro3, AXL | [ | |
| Retinal microvascular endothelial cells | Tyro3, AXL | ||
| Permissive human cell lines | |||
| Cell line | Origins | Permissiveness | References |
| SK-N-SH | Brain/Bone marrow | ** | [ |
| SH-SY5Y | Nerve | ** | [ |
| SF268 | CNS in brain | *** | [ |
| HBMEC | Brain | *** | [ |
| SNB19 | CNS in brain | *** | [ |
| Huh-7 | Liver | *** | [ |
| HFF-1 | Skin | *** | [ |
| A549 | Lung | *** | [ |
| HOBIT | Osteoblast-like Cells | *** | [ |
Note: **, moderate permissive; ***, highly permissive.
Cellular antiviral responses and viral counteractions during Zika infection.
| Cellular Antiviral Responses to Zika Infection | |||
| Cellular Response | Cellular Protein Involved | Molecular Actions and Consequences | References |
| Pro-inflammatory CD8+ T-cell immune response | Cytokines: IL-1β, IL-6, MIP1α; chemokines: IP-10, RANTES | T-cell mediated polyfunctional immune responses with releases of antiviral cytokines and chemokines | [ |
| CD14+ monocytes and macrophages immune response | CXCL9, CXCL10, CXCL11, CCL5, IL-15 | CD14+ monocytes prime NK cell activities during ZIKV infection | [ |
| Humoral immune response | IgM, IgG | Production of neutralizing and protective antibodies to ZIKV | [ |
| Cellular innate immune response: TLR3-mediated response | TLR3, IRF3, TBK1, type I IFNs, and IFNβ | An early response that triggers IRF3 and recognizes ZIKV dsRNA in cytoplasm leading to activation of type I IFNs and IFNβ production | [ |
| Cellular innate immune response: RIG-1/MDA5-mediated response | RIG-1, MDA5, IRF-3, NFkB, type I IFNs, and IFNβ | Late responses that recognize ZIKV dsRNA and contribute to activation of type I IFNs and IFNβ production | [ |
| Type I and type III interferon activation | OAS2, ISG15, MX1 | Production of IFNβ as part of the cellular antiviral responses | [ |
| Viral response | Viral protein involved | Molecular actions and consequences | References |
| Counteraction to activation of type 1 IFNs and IFNβ production | NS1, NS2A, NS2B, NS4A, NS4B and NS5 | Targeting RIG-1 pathway | [ |
| Inhibition of IFNβ production | NS1, NS4A, NS4B, NS5 | NS4A and NS5 inhibit IRF3 and NFkB; NS1 inhibits IRF3 IFNβ production through binding to TBK1 | [ |
| Inhibition of the JAK/STAT pathway | NS5, PR | NS5 binds to STAT2 for its proteasomal degradation; PR inhibits JAK1 kinase | [ |
| Selective activation of type II IFN signaling | NS5 | NS5 promotes the formation of STAT1/STAT1 homodimers and activates type II IFN for viral replication | [ |
| Induction of cellular autophagy | prM, M, NS1, NS2A, NS4A | In a yeast study, these ZIKV proteins induced cellular autophagy as indicated by formation of cytoplasmic puncta | [ |
| Induction of cellular autophagy | NS4A, NS4B | Inhibit Akt-mediated mTOR pathway through Tor1/TSC1 and Tip41 | [ |
Figure 2This figure illustrates Zika virus interactions with host cells. The Zika virus or proteins are colored in red. Cellular receptors or proteins that are affected by ZIKV are shown in blue. Cellular proteins shown in green are regulatory proteins such as kinases. Three Zika viruses are used here to show ZIKV-induced T-cell responses (left), ZIKV-mediated type I and type III IFNs productions (middle) and ZIKV-triggered autophagy (right). → indicates a positive interaction. ┤ denotes inhibitory action. Small red dots are used to indicate phosphorylation.
ZIKV proteins and associated cytopathic effects.
| Protein | Primary Function | Main Phenotypes | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Structural Proteins | |||
| anaC | Anchored capsid protein | In the fission yeast cells, it restricts cellular growth and affects cell cycling. It also induces cellular oxidative stress leading to cell death. | [ |
| C | Capsid protein | In the fission yeast cells, it restricts cellular growth. It also induces cellular oxidative stress leading to cell death; in hNPCs, it induces ribosomal stress and apoptosis. | [ |
| prM | Precursor membrane protein | In the fission yeast cells, it restricts cellular growth and affects cell cycling. It also induces cellular oxidative stress and autophagy leading to cell death; a single prM mutation contributes to fetal microcephaly | [ |
| M | Membrane protein | In the fission yeast cells, it restricts cellular growth and affects cell cycling. It also induces cellular oxidative stress and autophagy, leading to cell death. | [ |
| Pr | Cleaved product from prM | Unknown | |
| E | Envelope protein | A putative cytopathic factor based on a yeast study. E protein facilitates viral entry. A single residue in the αB helix of the E protein is critical for Zika virus thermostability, and interaction with the host cell membrane. | [ |
| Non-structural Proteins | |||
| NS1 | Viral replication, pathogenesis and immune evasion | In the fission yeast cells, it induces cellular oxidative stress and autophagy leading to cell death; An essential role in viral replication and immune evasion. It presents on the cell surface and presents as a dimer within cells, and as a hexamer once being secreted. NS1-mediated CPEs in mammalian cells have not yet been established. | [ |
| NS2A | Unknown | In the fission yeast cells, it induces cellular oxidative stress and autophagy leading to cell death; ZIKV-encoded NS2A disrupts mammalian cortical neurogenesis by degrading adherens junction (AJ) proteins, leading to reduced proliferation and premature differentiation of radial glial cells and aberrant positioning of newborn neurons. | [ |
| NS2B | Protease cofactor | In fission yeast cells, it restricts cellular growth. Forms a protease complex with NS3; a putative cytopathic factor based on a yeast study | [ |
| NS3 | Protease and helicase | NS3-mediated CPEs in mammalian cells have not yet been established. | [ |
| NS4A | Viral RNA synthesis and viral morphogenesis | In the fission yeast cells, it restricts cellular growth and affects cell cycling. It also induces cellular oxidative stress and autophagy leading to cell death. It induces autophagy by inhibiting Atk-mediated TOR pathway through Tor1/TSC1 and Tip41 in both yeast and mammalian cells. | [ |
| 2K | A signal peptide | Viral RNA synthesis and viral morphogenesis. 2K-mediated CPEs have not yet been established. | [ |
| NS4B | Viral RNA synthesis and viral morphogenesis | Synergistic to NS4A on inhibiting Akt-mediated TOR pathway | [ |
| NS5 | Methyltrasferase; RNA-dependent polymerase | NS5-mediated CPEs in mammalian cells have not yet been established. | [ |