| Literature DB >> 30504926 |
Kyra Hermanns1,2, Claudia Göhner2,3, Anne Kopp1,2, Andre Schmidt3, Waltraut M Merz4, Udo R Markert3, Sandra Junglen1,2, Christian Drosten5,6.
Abstract
The current Zika virus (ZIKV) outbreak is associated with neurological malformations and disorders in neonates. Areas of increased incidence of malformations may overlap with dengue-hyperendemic areas. ZIKV infection is enhanced by antibodies against dengue virus (DENV) in cell culture and inbred mice. Sufficiently powered clinical studies or primate studies addressing the enhancement of fetal ZIKV infection after previous dengue infection are not available. The human placenta is susceptible to ZIKV in vitro, but it is unknown whether antibody-dependent enhancement of ZIKV infection occurs at the placental barrier. Here we studied ZIKV infection in placental tissue in the presence of DENV-immune sera. Explants from the amniochorionic membrane, the chorionic villi, and the maternal decidua were infected with ZIKV in the presence of DENV type 1-, 2-, or 4-immune sera, or controls. Presence of DENV antibodies of any type enhanced the percentage of successful infections of organ explants between 1.42- and 2.67-fold, and led to a faster replication as well as significantly increased virus production. No enhancement was seen with yellow fever or chikungunya virus control sera. Pre-existing DENV antibodies may pose an increased risk of trans-placental ZIKV transmission.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30504926 PMCID: PMC6274641 DOI: 10.1038/s41426-018-0199-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Microbes Infect ISSN: 2222-1751 Impact factor: 7.163
Fig. 1Replication and DENV-specific ADE in cell cultures and placental explants.
a ZIKV replication in placental cell lines. Cells were infected with ZIKV at MOI of 0.1. ZIKV genome RNA concentrations were measured by real-time RT-PCR for 3 days after infection. Each datum point represents the mean of triplicates with SD. b ZIKV replication kinetics in different placental tissue explants and ADE by DENV antibodies. Placental villus, maternal decidua, and amnion explants from three donors were infected with ZIKV (1.5 × 105 PFU/mL) with or without prior incubation with human sera containing antibodies against DENV-1, DENV-2, or DENV-4. Four dpi ZIKV concentrations were quantified by real-time RT-PCR. Each column represents the median of 9 (ZIKV) or 27 explants (ZIKV + D) with interquartile range. Statistical analysis was performed with the Mann–Whitney test (*P < 0.05). c–e ZIKV infection kinetics in presence or absence of DENV-, YFV-, or CHIKV-immune sera, or naïve human serum. Placental villus (c), maternal decidua (d), and amnion (e) explants from four donors were infected with ZIKV (1.5 ×105 PFU/mL) with or without prior incubation with human sera containing either antibodies against three different DENV serotypes, YFV or CHIKV, or a control serum. Virus concentrations of inocula 0 dpi and viral progeny 1, 2, 4, 6, and 8 dpi were quantified by real-time RT-PCR. All infections were done in triplicates for each placenta. Data points represent the mean of 12 explants per setting with SEM. Inocula were measured once per placenta and setting. ZIKV + D1 ZIKV + DENV-1-immune serum, ZIKV + D2 ZIKV + DENV-2-immune serum, ZIKV + D4 ZIKV + DENV-4-immune serum, ZIKV + YF ZIKV + YFV-immune serum, ZIKV + CH ZIKV + CHIKV-immune serum, ZIKV + S− ZIKV + flavi- and alphavirus-naïve serum
Fig. 2ZIKV replication in different placental tissue explants and ADE by DENV antibodies.
Placental villus (a), maternal decidua (b), and amnion (c) explants were infected in triplicates with ZIKV (1.5 × 105 PFU/mL) with or without prior incubation with human sera that either contained antibodies against one of three different DENV serotypes as indicated, YFV or CHIKV, or a control serum. The virus concentration of the inoculum 0 dpi and viral replication 1, 2, 4, 6, and 8 dpi were determined by quantitative real-time RT-PCR. Explants were obtained from four donors as indicated by black, blue, red, and yellow dots. Medians with interquartile ranges are presented for each treatment. The dashed line shows the threshold for successful infection used for the infection rate calculation in Table 1. The continuous line represents the detection limit of the real-time RT-PCR. Statistical analysis was performed with the Kruskal–Wallis test combined with Dunn’s multiple comparison test. Significant differences are indicated in red (Z + D1), blue (Z + D2), and green (Z + D4) (*P < 0.05, **P < 0.01, ***P < 0.001). Z + D1 ZIKV + DENV-1-immune serum, Z + D2 ZIKV + DENV-2-immune serum, Z + D4 ZIKV + DENV-4-immune serum, Z + YF ZIKV + YFV-immune serum, Z + CH ZIKV + CHIKV-immune serum, Z + S− ZIKV + flavi- and alphavirus-naïve serum
ZIKV infection rates and ADE in different placental tissue explants
| Successfully infected explants | Relative risk (Fisher’s exact test) | |||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ZIKV | Z + S − | Z + CH | Z + YF | Z + D1 | Z + D2 | Z + D4 | Z + C1 | Z + nD2 | Z + D3 | Z + D/ Z + C | Z + D/ Z + nD | |
| Amnion | 3/12 (25%) | 4/12 (33%) | 3/12 (25%) | 1/12 (8%) | 7/12 (58%) | 6/12 (50%) | 9/12 (75%) | 7/24 (29%) | 11/48 (23%) | 22/36 (61%) | 2.1 (0.0193) | 2.67 (0.0006) |
| Decidua | 6/12 (50%) | 6/12 (50%) | 9/12 (75%) | 11/12 (92%) | 12/12 (100%) | 10/12 (83%) | 12/12 (100%) | 12/24 (50%) | 32/48 (67%) | 34/36 (94%) | 1.89 (0.0001) | 1.42 (0.0025) |
| Villus | 5/12 (42%) | 5/12 (42%) | 11/12 (92%) | 4/12 (33%) | 12/12 (100%) | 11/12 (92%) | 11/12 (92%) | 10/24 (42%) | 25/48 (52%) | 34/36 (94%) | 2.27 ( < 0.0001) | 1.81 ( < 0.0001) |
1Sum of ZIKV and Z + S −; 2Sum of all settings without DENV serum; 3Sum of all settings containing DENV sera. Z + D1 ZIKV + DENV-1-immune serum, Z + D2 ZIKV + DENV-2-immune serum, Z + D4 ZIKV + DENV-4-immune serum, Z + YF ZIKV + YFV-immune serum, Z + CH ZIKV + CHIKV-immune serum, Z + S − ZIKV + flavi- and alphavirus-naive serum.