| Literature DB >> 33424801 |
Shu Yang1, Kirill Gorshkov1, Emily M Lee1, Miao Xu1, Yu-Shan Cheng1, Nuo Sun2, Ferri Soheilian3, Natalia de Val3, Guoli Ming4, Hongjun Song4, Hengli Tang5, Wei Zheng1.
Abstract
The 2015 to 2016 outbreak of Zika virus (ZIKV) infections in the Americas coincided with a dramatic increase in neurodevelopmental abnormalities, including fetal microcephaly, in newborns born to infected women. In this study, we observed mitochondrial fragmentation and disrupted mitochondrial membrane potential after 24 h of ZIKV infection in human neural stem cells and the SNB-19 glioblastoma cell line. The severity of these changes correlated with the amount of ZIKV proteins expressed in infected cells. ZIKV infection also decreased the levels of mitofusin 2, which modulates mitochondria fusion. Mitochondrial division inhibitor 1 (Mdivi-1), a small molecule inhibiting mitochondria fission, ameliorated mitochondria disruptions and reduced cell death in ZIKV-infected cells. Collectively, this study suggests that abnormal mitochondrial fragmentation contributes to ZIKV-induced neuronal cell death; rebalancing mitochondrial dynamics of fission-fusion could be a therapeutic strategy for drug development to treat ZIKV-mediated neuronal apoptosis.Entities:
Keywords: MFN2; Zika virus; apoptosis; mitochondrial fragmentation; mitofusin
Year: 2020 PMID: 33424801 PMCID: PMC7785723 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2020.598203
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 6.064