Mechanisms of Zika astrocyte infection and neuronal toxicity

Author:

Veilleux Courtney12,Eugenin Eliseo A.123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Public Health Research Institute (PHRI) , New York , USA

2. Deparment of Microbiology, Biochemistry, and Molecular Genetics , Rutgers New Jersey Medical School, Rutgers the State University of New Jersey , Newark , NJ , USA

3. Department of Neurobiology , University of Texas Medical Branch (UTMB) , Galveston , TX , USA

Abstract

Abstract Objectives Zika virus (ZIKV) has become an epidemic in several countries and was declared a major public health issue by the WHO. Although ZIKV infection is asymptomatic or shows mild fever-related symptoms in most people, the virus can be transmitted from a pregnant mother to the fetus, resulting in severe brain developmental abnormalities, including microcephaly. Multiple groups have identified developmental neuronal and neuronal progenitor compromise during ZIKV infection within the fetal brain, but little is known about whether ZIKV could infect human astrocytes and its effect on the developing brain. Thus, our objective was to determine astrocyte ZiKV infection in a developmental-dependent manner. Methods We analyze infection of pure cultures of astrocytes and mixed cultures of neurons and astrocytes in response to ZIKV using plaque assays, confocal, and electron microscopy to identify infectivity, ZIKV accumulation and intracellular distribution as well as apoptosis and interorganelle dysfunction. Results Here, we demonstrated that ZIKV enters, infects, replicates, and accumulates in large quantities in human fetal astrocytes in a developmental-dependent manner. Astrocyte infection and intracellular viral accumulation resulted in neuronal apoptosis, and we propose astrocytes are a ZIKV reservoir during brain development. Conclusions Our data identify astrocytes in different stages of development as major contributors to the devastating effects of ZIKV in the developing brain.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

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