| Literature DB >> 32747564 |
Chao Shan1,2, Hongjie Xia3, Sherry L Haller4,5,6, Sasha R Azar4,5,6, Yang Liu3, Jianying Liu4,5, Antonio E Muruato4, Rubing Chen4,5,6,7, Shannan L Rossi4,5,7, Maki Wakamiya3, Nikos Vasilakis5,7,8,9,10, Rongjuan Pei2, Camila R Fontes-Garfias3, Sanjay Kumar Singh11, Xuping Xie3, Scott C Weaver12,5,6,13,14, Pei-Yong Shi1,5,6,13,14.
Abstract
Arboviruses maintain high mutation rates due to lack of proofreading ability of their viral polymerases, in some cases facilitating adaptive evolution and emergence. Here we show that, just before its 2013 spread to the Americas, Zika virus (ZIKV) underwent an envelope protein V473M substitution (E-V473M) that increased neurovirulence, maternal-to-fetal transmission, and viremia to facilitate urban transmission. A preepidemic Asian ZIKV strain (FSS13025 isolated in Cambodia in 2010) engineered with the V473M substitution significantly increased neurovirulence in neonatal mice and produced higher viral loads in the placenta and fetal heads in pregnant mice. Conversely, an epidemic ZIKV strain (PRVABC59 isolated in Puerto Rico in 2015) engineered with the inverse M473V substitution reversed the pathogenic phenotypes. Although E-V473M did not affect oral infection of Aedes aegypti mosquitoes, competition experiments in cynomolgus macaques showed that this mutation increased its fitness for viremia generation, suggesting adaptive evolution for human viremia and hence transmission. Mechanistically, the V473M mutation, located at the second transmembrane helix of the E protein, enhances virion morphogenesis. Overall, our study revealed E-V473M as a critical determinant for enhanced ZIKV virulence, intrauterine transmission during pregnancy, and viremia to facilitate urban transmission.Entities:
Keywords: Zika; envelope; evolution; transmission
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32747564 PMCID: PMC7443865 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2005722117
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205