Literature DB >> 31687902

Immune Evasion Strategies Used by Zika Virus to Infect the Fetal Eye and Brain.

Branden R Nelson1, Justin A Roby2,3, William B Dobyns1,4, Lakshmi Rajagopal2,4,5,6, Michael Gale2,3,6, Kristina M Adams Waldorf2,6,7,8.   

Abstract

Zika virus (ZIKV) is a mosquito-transmitted flavivirus that caused a public health emergency in the Americas when an outbreak in Brazil became linked to congenital microcephaly. Understanding how ZIKV could evade the innate immune defenses of the mother, placenta, and fetus has become central to determining how the virus can traffic into the fetal brain. ZIKV, like other flaviviruses, evades host innate immune responses by leveraging viral proteins and other processes that occur during viral replication to allow spread to the placenta. Within the placenta, there are diverse cell types with coreceptors for ZIKV entry, creating an opportunity for the virus to establish a reservoir for replication and infect the fetus. The fetal brain is vulnerable to ZIKV, particularly during the first trimester, when it is beginning a dynamic process, to form highly complex and specialized regions orchestrated by neuroprogenitor cells. In this review, we provide a conceptual framework to understand the different routes for viral trafficking into the fetal brain and the eye, which are most likely to occur early and later in pregnancy. Based on the injury profile in human and nonhuman primates, ZIKV entry into the fetal brain likely occurs across both the blood/cerebrospinal fluid barrier in the choroid plexus and the blood/brain barrier. ZIKV can also enter the eye by trafficking across the blood/retinal barrier. Ultimately, the efficient escape of innate immune defenses by ZIKV is a key factor leading to viral infection. However, the host immune response against ZIKV can lead to injury and perturbations in developmental programs that drive cellular division, migration, and brain growth. The combined effect of innate immune evasion to facilitate viral propagation and the maternal/placental/fetal immune response to control the infection will determine the extent to which ZIKV can injure the fetal brain.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Zika virus; brain; innate immunity; neural stem cell; placenta; pregnancy

Year:  2019        PMID: 31687902      PMCID: PMC6978768          DOI: 10.1089/vim.2019.0082

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Viral Immunol        ISSN: 0882-8245            Impact factor:   2.257


  185 in total

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Authors:  Suchita Bhattacharyya; Anna Zagórska; Erin D Lew; Bimmi Shrestha; Carla V Rothlin; John Naughton; Michael S Diamond; Greg Lemke; John A T Young
Journal:  Cell Host Microbe       Date:  2013-08-14       Impact factor: 21.023

2.  Inhibition of interferon-stimulated JAK-STAT signaling by a tick-borne flavivirus and identification of NS5 as an interferon antagonist.

Authors:  Sonja M Best; Keely L Morris; Jeffrey G Shannon; Shelly J Robertson; Dana N Mitzel; Gregory S Park; Elena Boer; James B Wolfinbarger; Marshall E Bloom
Journal:  J Virol       Date:  2005-10       Impact factor: 5.103

Review 3.  Adult Mammalian Neural Stem Cells and Neurogenesis: Five Decades Later.

Authors:  Allison M Bond; Guo-Li Ming; Hongjun Song
Journal:  Cell Stem Cell       Date:  2015-10-01       Impact factor: 24.633

4.  Zika virus inhibits type-I interferon production and downstream signaling.

Authors:  Anil Kumar; Shangmei Hou; Adriana M Airo; Daniel Limonta; Valeria Mancinelli; William Branton; Christopher Power; Tom C Hobman
Journal:  EMBO Rep       Date:  2016-10-24       Impact factor: 8.807

5.  The Fc region of an antibody impacts the neutralization of West Nile viruses in different maturation states.

Authors:  Phong D Lee; Swati Mukherjee; Melissa A Edeling; Kimberly A Dowd; S Kyle Austin; Carolyn J Manhart; Michael S Diamond; Daved H Fremont; Theodore C Pierson
Journal:  J Virol       Date:  2013-10-09       Impact factor: 5.103

6.  Postnatal Zika virus infection is associated with persistent abnormalities in brain structure, function, and behavior in infant macaques.

Authors:  Maud Mavigner; Jessica Raper; Zsofia Kovacs-Balint; Sanjeev Gumber; Justin T O'Neal; Siddhartha K Bhaumik; Xiaodong Zhang; Jakob Habib; Cameron Mattingly; Circe E McDonald; Victoria Avanzato; Mark W Burke; Diogo M Magnani; Varian K Bailey; David I Watkins; Thomas H Vanderford; Damien Fair; Eric Earl; Eric Feczko; Martin Styner; Sherrie M Jean; Joyce K Cohen; Guido Silvestri; R Paul Johnson; David H O'Connor; Jens Wrammert; Mehul S Suthar; Mar M Sanchez; Maria C Alvarado; Ann Chahroudi
Journal:  Sci Transl Med       Date:  2018-04-04       Impact factor: 17.956

7.  Spontaneous Abortion Associated with Zika Virus Infection and Persistent Viremia.

Authors:  Anna Goncé; Miguel J Martínez; Elena Marbán-Castro; Adela Saco; Anna Soler; Maria Isabel Alvarez-Mora; Aida Peiro; Verónica Gonzalo; Gillian Hale; Julu Bhatnagar; Marta López; Sherif Zaki; Jaume Ordi; Azucena Bardají
Journal:  Emerg Infect Dis       Date:  2018-05       Impact factor: 6.883

8.  Infection with a Brazilian isolate of Zika virus generates RIG-I stimulatory RNA and the viral NS5 protein blocks type I IFN induction and signaling.

Authors:  Jonny Hertzog; Antonio Gregorio Dias Junior; Rachel E Rigby; Claire L Donald; Alice Mayer; Erdinc Sezgin; Chaojun Song; Boquan Jin; Philip Hublitz; Christian Eggeling; Alain Kohl; Jan Rehwinkel
Journal:  Eur J Immunol       Date:  2018-04-06       Impact factor: 5.532

9.  Lucidone suppresses dengue viral replication through the induction of heme oxygenase-1.

Authors:  Wei-Chun Chen; Chin-Kai Tseng; Chun-Kuang Lin; Shen-Nien Wang; Wen-Hung Wang; Shih-Hsien Hsu; Yu-Hsuan Wu; Ling-Chien Hung; Yen-Hsu Chen; Jin-Ching Lee
Journal:  Virulence       Date:  2018-01-01       Impact factor: 5.882

10.  Zika Virus Disrupts Phospho-TBK1 Localization and Mitosis in Human Neuroepithelial Stem Cells and Radial Glia.

Authors:  Marco Onorati; Zhen Li; Fuchen Liu; André M M Sousa; Naoki Nakagawa; Mingfeng Li; Maria Teresa Dell'Anno; Forrest O Gulden; Sirisha Pochareddy; Andrew T N Tebbenkamp; Wenqi Han; Mihovil Pletikos; Tianliuyun Gao; Ying Zhu; Candace Bichsel; Luis Varela; Klara Szigeti-Buck; Steven Lisgo; Yalan Zhang; Anze Testen; Xiao-Bing Gao; Jernej Mlakar; Mara Popovic; Marie Flamand; Stephen M Strittmatter; Leonard K Kaczmarek; E S Anton; Tamas L Horvath; Brett D Lindenbach; Nenad Sestan
Journal:  Cell Rep       Date:  2016-08-24       Impact factor: 9.423

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Authors:  Bisant A Labib; DeGaulle I Chigbu
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2.  Does the human placenta express the canonical cell entry mediators for SARS-CoV-2?

Authors:  Roger Pique-Regi; Roberto Romero; Adi L Tarca; Francesca Luca; Yi Xu; Adnan Alazizi; Yaozhu Leng; Chaur-Dong Hsu; Nardhy Gomez-Lopez
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3.  Evolution of ocular defects in infant macaques following in utero Zika virus infection.

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Review 4.  Zika Virus Pathogenesis: A Battle for Immune Evasion.

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5.  A Rat Model of Prenatal Zika Virus Infection and Associated Long-Term Outcomes.

Authors:  Morgan L Sherer; Elise A Lemanski; Rita T Patel; Shannon R Wheeler; Mark S Parcells; Jaclyn M Schwarz
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Review 6.  The choroid plexus and its role in the pathogenesis of neurological infections.

Authors:  Derick Thompson; Catherine A Brissette; John A Watt
Journal:  Fluids Barriers CNS       Date:  2022-09-10

Review 7.  Host immune response against DENV and ZIKV infections.

Authors:  Shamala Devi Sekaran; Amni Adilah Ismail; Gaythri Thergarajan; Samudi Chandramathi; S K Hanan Rahman; Ravishankar Ram Mani; Felicita Fedelis Jusof; Yvonne A L Lim; Rishya Manikam
Journal:  Front Cell Infect Microbiol       Date:  2022-09-08       Impact factor: 6.073

Review 8.  Non-human Primate Models to Investigate Mechanisms of Infection-Associated Fetal and Pediatric Injury, Teratogenesis and Stillbirth.

Authors:  Miranda Li; Alyssa Brokaw; Anna M Furuta; Brahm Coler; Veronica Obregon-Perko; Ann Chahroudi; Hsuan-Yuan Wang; Sallie R Permar; Charlotte E Hotchkiss; Thaddeus G Golos; Lakshmi Rajagopal; Kristina M Adams Waldorf
Journal:  Front Genet       Date:  2021-07-05       Impact factor: 4.599

9.  Intermediate progenitors support migration of neural stem cells into dentate gyrus outer neurogenic niches.

Authors:  Branden R Nelson; Rebecca D Hodge; Ray Am Daza; Prem Prakash Tripathi; Sebastian J Arnold; Kathleen J Millen; Robert F Hevner
Journal:  Elife       Date:  2020-04-03       Impact factor: 8.140

10.  Paracrine IFN Response Limits ZIKV Infection in Human Sertoli Cells.

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Journal:  Front Microbiol       Date:  2021-05-17       Impact factor: 5.640

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