| Literature DB >> 32432225 |
Pascal J Goldschmidt-Clermont1, Jean-Loup Romet Lemonne2, Arnaud Fontanet3,4, Mario Stevenson5.
Abstract
With growth and exponential globe trotter traveling of the human population, and many more conducive factors, the likelihood of merging and melting viruses capable of infecting humans in a cooperative fashion, has increased markedly. Hence, viruses that were limited to a particular region of the planet, or to certain population groups, have become capable of infecting humans on a pandemic scale. Some viruses not only can infect pregnant women, but also expand to the amnotic fluid and fetus. With this review, we will reflect upon some examples of known viral cooperations, as well as new ones that have the potential for compromising human health and survival of the fetus in utero.Entities:
Keywords: fetus infection; placental; pregnancy; virus cooperation; women and child health; zika virus
Year: 2019 PMID: 32432225 PMCID: PMC7236908
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Women Health Care Issues ISSN: 2642-9756
Figure 1:HIV and KSHV cooperation.
As the pandemic of HIV was spreading worldwide during the last quarter of the 20th century, Kaposi Sarcoma caused by KSHV (HHV8) has expanded from an infrequent illness for elderly men in the Mediterranean Basin and Africa, to a ubiquitous cancer affecting millions of men and also women, and still is the leading cancer for AIDS patients in sub-Saharan Africa, as a result of “virus cooperation” between KSHV and HIV.
Figure 2:Virus cooperation hypothesis for ZIKV infection of the placenta and the fetus brain.
A. The prolonged viremia of ZIKV seen in non-human primates (18) might allow for accumulation of the virus load resulting from consecutive exposures to bites from Ae. Aegypti mosquito (carrier of ZIKV). The resulting viremia overwhelms the placental defense against the virus (autologous cooperation). Alternatively, a prior or concurrent infection (reactivation) of a pregnant woman with a Human Herpes Virus (HHVn) capable of infecting the placenta, might weaken placental resistance to ZIKV, thus creating an opportunity for ZIKV to invade placenta and fetus even in the presence of lower ZIKV viremia (heterologous cooperation).
In both cases, ZIKV ends up infecting the brain (the proclivity of ZIKV for the brain of the unborn fetus results in microcephaly as shown), and other fetal tissues. In the absence of such viral cooperation, the placenta is readily capable of blocking ZIKV and thus protecting the fetus1.
B. Theoretical graph showing successive mosquito bites (red dots) in a non-pregnant woman (left panel) resulting in limited viremia, versus successive bites in a pregnant woman (right panel), showing the impact on viremia. The challenge created by pregnancy to eliminate ZIKV from the mother’s blood results in a cumulative viremia that exceeds the threshold (dotted line) for infection of the placenta and fetus.
1 Artist rendering of virus capsids for figures 1 and 2 were inspired by the image reconstruction of the viral capsids as defined by electron cryomicroscopy work: (a) KSHV: Trus BL, Heymann B, Nealon K, Cheng N, Newcomb WW, Brown JC, Kedes DH, Steven AC. Capsid structure of Kaposi’s sarcoma-associated herpersvirus, a gammaherpesvirus, compared to those of an alphaherpesvirus, herpes simplex virus type 1, and a betaherpesvirus, cytomegalovirus. J Virology 75:2879–2890, 2001. (b) HIV: Zhao G, Perilla JR, Yufenyuy EL, Meng X, Chen B, Ning J, Ahn J, Gronenborn AM, Schulten K, Aiken C, Zhang P. Mature HIV-1 capsid structure by cryo-electron microscopy and all-atom molecular dynamics. Nature 497:643–646, 2013. (c) ZIKV: Sirohi D, Chen Z, Sun L, Klose T, Pierson TC, Rossmann MG, Kuhn RJ. The 3.8 Å resolution cryo-EM structure of Zika virus. Science 10.1126/science.aaf5316, 2016. (d) HCMV: Butcher SJ, Aitken J, Mitchell J, Gowen B, Dargan DJ. Structure of the human cytomegalovirus B capsid by electron cryomicroscopy and image reconstruction. J Structural Biology 124:70–76, 1998