| Literature DB >> 30097025 |
Carlos A A Brito1, Adélia Henriques-Souza2, Cynthia R P Soares3, Priscila M S Castanha3, Laís C Machado4, Mylena R Pereira5, Mariana C M Sobral4, Antonio R Lucena-Araujo6, Gabriel L Wallau4, Rafael F O Franca7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Zika virus (ZIKV) is a recently emerged arbovirus, which infection during pregnancy is associated with a series of congenital malformations, collectively denominated Congenital Zika Syndrome (CZS). Following infection, ZIKV RNA has a median duration period of 10 days in plasma and up to 6 months in semen in immunocompetent adult individuals. Moreover, ZIKV is able to replicate and persist in fetal brains and placentas, consequently, infection is associated with pregnancy loss, albeit the pathogenic mechanisms are still unknown. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Microcephaly; Neurological disease; Virus persistence; Zika virus
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30097025 PMCID: PMC6086026 DOI: 10.1186/s12879-018-3313-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Fig. 1Brain Imaging after birth. a MRI Sagittal T1 weighted image: hypogenesis of the corpus callosum, enlarged cisterna magna, and ventriculomegaly. b MRI Axial T2 weighted image: simplified frontal gyral pattern, ventriculomegaly. c Axial T1 weighted image: pachygyria/lissencephaly in the frontal lobe, ventriculomegaly. d, e, f MRI Axial T1 weighted image: simplified frontal gyral pattern, ventriculomegaly, cerebellum hemisphere hypoplasia. g, h, i Axial non-contrast CT image: multiple bilateral calcifications in the junction between cortical and subcortical white matter, ventricular enlargement
Fig. 2Clinical and laboratorial timeline of a persistent Zika virus Severe Microcephaly case. The panel shows the clinical and laboratory results of pregnancy and birth, mother and child samples (as designated on figure) were tested accordingly to Brazilian Ministry of Health protocol for Congenital Zika Syndrome investigation, as described in material and methods. Principal clinical findings are shown in the bottom. STORCH denotes a group of laboratory tests comprising syphilis, toxoplasmosis, rubella, cytomegalovirus infection, and herpes simplex viruses; maximum interval denotes the results from two consecutive samples with positive laboratory result for ZIKV on rRT-PCR protocol. PRNT plaque reduction neutralization test
Plaque Reduction Neutralization Test (PRNT) for Zika virus (ZIKV) and dengue virus (DENV1–4) in maternal serum, child serum and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) specimens collected at different ages of the neonate with Congenital Zika Syndrome
| Sample | Age at testing | PRNT50 Titer | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ZIKV | DENV-1 | DENV-2 | DENV-3 | DENV-4 | ||
| Mother (serum) | 17 monthsa | 972 | < 20 | < 20 | 689.5 | 262.7 |
| Neonate | ||||||
| Serum | 17 months | 527.9 | < 20 | < 20 | < 20 | < 20 |
| CSF | 6 months | 99 | < 20 | < 20 | < 20 | < 20 |
aAge of the child at the time of sample collection
Fig. 3ZIKV partial genomes obtained from samples. Read mapping pattern on the PE243 reference genome. Blue rectangles show coverage depth higher than 100 reads. The most external ring is the annotation of mature peptides (black and grey) and untranslated regions (red) of the ZIKV genome
Fig. 4ZIKV whole-genome phylogenetic analysis of the Asian lineage by maximum likelihood. The red shaded clade is on of the large polytomic tree of epidemic ZIKV where draft genomes obtained in this study clustered (red tree tips). Other large clusters were collapsed for clarity. Numbers close to nodes are the SH-like node support