Phenotypic Differences between Asian and African Lineage Zika Viruses in Human Neural Progenitor Cells

Author:

Anfasa Fatih12,Siegers Jurre Y.1,van der Kroeg Mark3,Mumtaz Noreen1,Stalin Raj V.1,de Vrij Femke M. S.3,Widagdo W.1,Gabriel Gülsah4,Salinas Sara5,Simonin Yannick5,Reusken Chantal1,Kushner Steven A.3ORCID,Koopmans Marion P. G.1,Haagmans Bart1,Martina Byron E. E.16,van Riel Debby1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Viroscience, Erasmus MC, Rotterdam, The Netherlands

2. Faculty of Medicine, Universitas Indonesia, Jakarta, Indonesia

3. Department of Psychiatry, Erasmus MC, Rotterdam, The Netherlands

4. Heinrich Pette Institute for Experimental Virology, Hamburg, Germany

5. UMR1058, Pathogenesis and Control of Chronic Infections, INSERM, Université de Montpellier, Etablissement Français Du Sang, Montpellier, France

6. Artemis One Health Research Foundation, Utrecht, The Netherlands

Abstract

The mechanism by which ZIKV causes a range of neurological complications, especially congenital microcephaly, is not well understood. The fact that congenital microcephaly is associated with Asian lineage ZIKV strains raises the question of why this was not discovered earlier. One possible explanation is that Asian and African ZIKV strains differ in their abilities to infect cells of the CNS and to cause neurodevelopmental problems. Here, we show that Asian ZIKV strains infect and induce cell death in human neural progenitor cells—which are important target cells in the development of congenital microcephaly—less efficiently than African ZIKV strains. These features of Asian ZIKV strains likely contribute to their ability to cause chronic infections, often observed in congenital microcephaly cases. It is therefore likely that phenotypic differences between ZIKV strains could be, at least in part, responsible for the ability of Asian ZIKV strains to cause congenital microcephaly.

Funder

Directorate of Higher Education PhD grant of the Ministry of Research, Technology and Higher Education of the Republic of Indonesia

Erasmus MC Foundation

European Union program ZIKAlliance

Reacting and La Region Languedoc Roussillon

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Molecular Biology,Microbiology

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