Alterations in the Cellular Metabolic Footprint Induced by Mayaro Virus

Author:

Castro Ceyla M. O.1,Mota Mânlio T. O.1,Vidotto Alessandra2,Caruso Ícaro P.34ORCID,Ribeiro Milene R.1,Moraes Fábio R.3ORCID,Souza Fátima P.3,Nogueira Mauricio L.2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Virology Research Laboratory, School of Medicine of São José do Rio Preto (FAMERP), São José do Rio Preto 15090-000, SP, Brazil

2. Multiuser Laboratory, School of Medicine of São José do Rio Preto (FAMERP), São José do Rio Preto 15090-000, SP, Brazil

3. Multiuser Center for Biomolecular Innovation, Department of Physics, São Paulo State University (UNESP), São José do Rio Preto 15054-000, SP, Brazil

4. Institute of Medical Biochemistry Leopoldo de Meis and National Center for Structural Biology and Bioimaging, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro 21.941-902, RJ, Brazil

Abstract

Mayaro virus is a neglected virus that causes a mild, dengue-like febrile syndrome characterized by fever, headache, rash, retro-orbital pain, vomiting, diarrhea, articular edemas, myalgia, and severe arthralgia, symptoms which may persist for months and become very debilitating. Though the virus is limited to forest areas and is most frequently transmitted by Haemagogus mosquitoes, Aedes mosquitoes can also transmit this virus and, therefore, it has the potential to spread to urban areas. This study focuses on the metabolic foot-printing of Vero cells infected with the Mayaro virus. Nuclear magnetic resonance combined with multivariate analytical methods and pattern recognition tools found that metabolic changes can be attributed to the effects of Mayaro virus infection on cell culture. The results suggest that several metabolite levels vary in infection conditions at different time points. There were important differences between the metabolic profile of non-infected and Mayaro-infected cells. These organic compounds are metabolites involved in the glycolysis pathway, the tricarboxylic acid cycle, the pentose phosphate pathway, and the oxidation pathway of fatty acids (via β-oxidation). This exometabolomic study has generated a biochemical profile reflecting the progressive cytopathological metabolic alterations induced by Mayaro virus replication in the cells and can contribute to the knowledge of the molecular mechanisms involved in viral pathogenesis.

Funder

São Paulo Research Foundation

Association for the Improvement of Higher Education Personnel (CAPES) scholarship

Brazilian National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq) fellowship

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Engineering

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