Literature DB >> 31727724

Complete Genome Sequence of a Colombian Zika Virus Strain Obtained from BALB/c Mouse Brain after Intraperitoneal Inoculation.

Katherine Laiton-Donato1, Diego A Álvarez-Díaz2, Aura Caterine Rengifo3, Orlando Torres-Fernández2, José A Usme-Ciro1,4, Jorge Alonso Rivera2, Gerardo Santamaría2, Julián Naizaque2, Jeison Monroy-Gómez2,5, Ladys Sarmiento2, María Luz Gunturiz6, Alejandra Muñoz7, Ricardo Vanegas7, Angélica Rico1, Lissethe Pardo1, Dioselina Peláez-Carvajal1.   

Abstract

A Zika virus (ZIKV) strain was isolated from an acute febrile patient during the Zika epidemics in Colombia. The strain was intraperitoneally inoculated into BALB/c mice, and 7 days postinoculation, neurological manifestations and ZIKV infection in the brain were demonstrated. The reported genome sequence is highly related to strains circulating in the Americas.
Copyright © 2019 Laiton-Donato et al.

Entities:  

Year:  2019        PMID: 31727724      PMCID: PMC6856290          DOI: 10.1128/MRA.01719-18

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Microbiol Resour Announc        ISSN: 2576-098X


ANNOUNCEMENT

Zika virus (ZIKV) is the etiological agent of an emerging viral disease with serious public health impact (1, 2). It belongs to the family Flaviviridae, genus Flavivirus, and possesses a positive-sense, single-stranded RNA genome of approximately 10.8 kb. From August 2015 to November 2016, Colombia reported 105,000 cases of ZIKV infection, and 147 cases of microcephaly were confirmed by laboratory diagnosis (3). Different factors have been associated with the development of ZIKV neuropathogenesis, including the selective infection and damage of neural progenitor cells (4) and antibody cross-reactivity leading to a demyelinating subtype of Guillain Barré syndrome (GBS) (5, 6). Experimental infection in an animal model could be valuable for identifying specific mutations allowing neuroinvasiveness and neurovirulence (7). Thus, BALB/c mice were infected with ZIKV as a means to understand the neuropathogenesis of Zika. A serum sample from a pregnant woman diagnosed according to the WHO classification of diseases (International Classification of Diseases, 10th Revision) with mosquito-borne viral fever, unspecified (A92.9) (https://icd.who.int/browse10/2016/en#/A92-A99), was collected in the city of Villavicencio (Meta, Colombia) on 17 January 2016 and submitted to the Instituto Nacional de Salud (INS)–Colombia for laboratory diagnosis as part of the national public health surveillance system. ZIKV infection was confirmed by real-time reverse transcription-PCR (RT-PCR) Trioplex assay (Chikungunya virus [CHIKV]-dengue virus [DENV]-ZIKV) (8). Serum was diluted 1:100 in minimal essential medium (MEM), and 200 μl of the dilution was inoculated in Vero cells. Cytopathic effect was observed 6 days after inoculation, and ZIKV was confirmed in cell supernatants by Trioplex assay. Five newborn mice were inoculated with ZIKV and mock infected with their respective controls by the intracerebral pathway. In this assay, coinfection of ZIKV and CHIKV was detected in the brains using the Trioplex assay, although no CHIKV was detected in the cell culture inoculated with the isolate. The initial inoculum contained CHIKV at a level below the detection limit of the assay (coinfections are frequently encountered in our region), and the CHIKV titers increased in the mouse brain due to the strong capacity of CHIKV to infect neurons (9, 10). To obtain a pure ZIKV strain without coinfections, a plaque-to-plaque transfer assay was performed. Seven lysis plaques (clones 1 to 7) were taken randomly with a syringe needle and cultured in Vero cells in independent assays. Five days postinoculation, 200 μl of the supernatants was reinoculated into a fresh monolayer, and 7 successive passages of each clone were done with the same strategy. This was done to rule out the growth of other possible viruses in these assays. Six of the clones (clones 2 to 7) were positive only for ZIKV, while clone 1 showed coinfection with CHIKV. The ZIKV clone 7 isolate was named Zika_virus_459148_Meta_Colombia_2016. The third passage of this isolate was titrated (1.25 × 107 PFU/ml); 40 μl was inoculated intraperitoneally into 10 newborn mice on postnatal day 1, and control animals were inoculated with culture supernatants of uninfected Vero cells. The presence of neurological manifestations such as hypersensitivity to touch, action tremor, and gait instability 7 days postinfection suggested that the strain was able to cross the developing blood-brain barrier. Fresh whole brains were collected by manual dissection; one cerebral hemisphere was immersed in RNAlater and stored at −70°C for molecular assays, and the other hemisphere was fixed in 4% buffered paraformaldehyde (PFA) solution for immunohistochemistry assays. The presence and purity of ZIKV was confirmed by immunoassays against ZIKV (anti-ZIKV pAb, lot 6 1576; donated by the CDC) and by conventional and real-time RT-PCR. Animal procedures were performed with the approval of the INS Animal Care and Use Committee (code 13-2016). RNA purification from brain tissues was performed using the RNeasy lipid tissue minikit (Qiagen, Hilden, Germany), followed by cDNA synthesis with SuperScript IV reverse transcriptase (Thermo Fisher Scientific, Waltham, MA, USA) and random hexamers (Promega, Dübendorf, Switzerland). One RNA sample from the brain was taken for ZIKV sequencing. The library was prepared with the Nextera XT DNA library prep kit (Illumina, San Diego, CA, USA). Sequencing was performed with the MiSeq reagent kit version 2 (Illumina) on a MiSeq instrument (2 × 300 bp). Reads were demultiplexed by barcode, and a total of 423,712 reads (paired ends) were obtained and quality filtered with FastQC using a Q-score threshold of 30. A total of 5,031 reads mapped directly to a reference genome (GenBank accession number NC_035889) with Bowtie2 version 2.0.0-beta7, with nucleotide similarity coverages of 99.6% and 99.57%. The polyprotein annotation was obtained through alignment with the Brazilian reference sequence (GenBank accession number YP_009428568 ). Ten nonsynonymous substitutions, namely D107E (capsid protein C), H691Y and E940K (membrane glycoprotein M), A1027T, K1059E, R1118W, and V1143M (envelope protein E), and I2509T, T3213I, and T3353A (nonstructural protein NS1), were observed in the polyprotein region (10,269 bp) when the sequence of Zika_virus_459148_Meta_Colombia_2016 was compared to the Brazilian reference sequence. In summary, we report here the sequence of a ZIKV strain that is closely related to circulating strains in the Americas and able to infect brain tissue and produce neurological signs in a model of developing murine brain.

Data availability.

The ZIKV genome sequence obtained from brains of infected BALB/c mice has been deposited in GenBank under the nucleotide accession number MH544701 and the Sequence Read Archive (SRA) accession number SRX4553103.
  10 in total

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2.  Neuropathogenesis of Zika Virus Infection : Potential Roles of Antibody-Mediated Pathology.

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3.  Preliminary Report of Microcephaly Potentially Associated with Zika Virus Infection During Pregnancy - Colombia, January-November 2016.

Authors:  Esther Liliana Cuevas; Van T Tong; Nathaly Rozo; Diana Valencia; Oscar Pacheco; Suzanne M Gilboa; Marcela Mercado; Christina M Renquist; Maritza González; Elizabeth C Ailes; Carolina Duarte; Valerie Godoshian; Christina L Sancken; Angelica Maria Rico Turca; Dinorah L Calles; Martha Ayala; Paula Morgan; Erika Natalia Tolosa Perez; Hernan Quijada Bonilla; Ruben Caceres Gomez; Ana Carolina Estupiñan; Maria Luz Gunturiz; Dana Meaney-Delman; Denise J Jamieson; Margaret A Honein; Martha Lucia Ospina Martínez
Journal:  MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep       Date:  2016-12-16       Impact factor: 17.586

4.  Zika Virus Transmission from French Polynesia to Brazil.

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Journal:  Emerg Infect Dis       Date:  2015-10       Impact factor: 6.883

Review 5.  The neurological complications of chikungunya virus: A systematic review.

Authors:  Ravi Mehta; Patrick Gerardin; Carlos Alexandre Antunes de Brito; Cristiane Nascimento Soares; Maria Lucia Brito Ferreira; Tom Solomon
Journal:  Rev Med Virol       Date:  2018-04-19       Impact factor: 6.989

6.  Zika virus infection dysregulates human neural stem cell growth and inhibits differentiation into neuroprogenitor cells.

Authors:  Pradip Devhare; Keith Meyer; Robert Steele; Ratna B Ray; Ranjit Ray
Journal:  Cell Death Dis       Date:  2017-10-12       Impact factor: 8.469

7.  American Strain of Zika Virus Causes More Severe Microcephaly Than an Old Asian Strain in Neonatal Mice.

Authors:  Feng Zhang; Hong-Jiang Wang; Qin Wang; Zhong-Yu Liu; Ling Yuan; Xing-Yao Huang; Guanghui Li; Qing Ye; Haozhen Yang; Lei Shi; Yong-Qiang Deng; Cheng-Feng Qin; Zhiheng Xu
Journal:  EBioMedicine       Date:  2017-10-20       Impact factor: 8.143

8.  Performance of the Trioplex real-time RT-PCR assay for detection of Zika, dengue, and chikungunya viruses.

Authors:  Gilberto A Santiago; Jesús Vázquez; Sean Courtney; Katia Y Matías; Lauren E Andersen; Candimar Colón; Angela E Butler; Rebecca Roulo; John Bowzard; Julie M Villanueva; Jorge L Muñoz-Jordan
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9.  Clinical and Laboratory Profile of Zika and Dengue Infected Patients: Lessons Learned From the Co-circulation of Dengue, Zika and Chikungunya in Brazil.

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10.  Zika virus and Guillain-Barré syndrome in Bangladesh.

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  10 in total

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