White Martyn K, Wollebo Hassen S, David Beckham J, Tyler Kenneth L, Khalili Kamel
Department of Neuroscience, Center for Neurovirology, Comprehensive NeuroAIDS Center, Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple University, Philadelphia, PA.
Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Medicine, Anschutz Medical Campus, University of Colorado, Aurora, CO.
Ann Neurol. 2016 Oct;80(4):479-89. doi: 10.1002/ana.24748. Epub 2016 Aug 10.
The emergence of Zika virus in the Americas has followed a pattern that is familiar from earlier epidemics of other viruses, where a new disease is introduced into a human population and then spreads rapidly with important public health consequences. In the case of Zika virus, an accumulating body of recent evidence implicates the virus in the etiology of serious pathologies of the human nervous system, that is, the occurrence of microcephaly in neonates and Guillain-Barré syndrome in adults. Zika virus is an arbovirus (arthropod-borne virus) and a member of the family Flaviviridae, genus Flavivirus. Zika virions are enveloped and icosahedral, and contain a nonsegmented, single-stranded, positive-sense RNA genome, which encodes 3 structural and 7 nonstructural proteins that are expressed as a single polyprotein that undergoes cleavage. Zika genomic RNA replicates in the cytoplasm of infected host cells. Zika virus was first detected in 1947 in the blood of a febrile monkey in Uganda's Zika Forest and in crushed suspensions of the Aedes mosquito, which is one of the vectors for Zika virus. The virus remained obscure, with a few human cases confined to Africa and Asia. There are two lineages of the Zika virus, African and Asian, with the Asian strain causing outbreaks in Micronesia in 2007 and French Polynesia in 2013-2014. From here, the virus spread to Brazil with the first report of autochthonous Zika transmission in the Americas in March 2015. The rapid advance of the virus in the Americas and its likely association with microcephaly and Guillain-Barré syndrome make Zika an urgent public health concern. Ann Neurol 2016;80:479-489.
寨卡病毒在美洲的出现遵循了一种其他病毒早期流行时常见的模式,即一种新疾病传入人群后迅速传播,并产生重大的公共卫生后果。就寨卡病毒而言,最近越来越多的证据表明该病毒与人类神经系统严重病变的病因有关,即新生儿小头畸形和成人吉兰-巴雷综合征的发生。寨卡病毒是一种虫媒病毒(节肢动物传播病毒),属于黄病毒科黄病毒属。寨卡病毒粒子有包膜,呈二十面体,含有一个非节段性、单链、正链RNA基因组,该基因组编码3种结构蛋白和7种非结构蛋白,这些蛋白作为一个单一的多聚蛋白表达,然后进行切割。寨卡基因组RNA在受感染宿主细胞的细胞质中复制。寨卡病毒于1947年首次在乌干达寨卡森林一只发热猴子的血液中以及作为寨卡病毒传播媒介之一的埃及伊蚊的碾碎悬液中被检测到。该病毒一直未受到关注,仅有少数人类病例局限于非洲和亚洲。寨卡病毒有两个谱系,非洲谱系和亚洲谱系,亚洲毒株在2007年导致密克罗尼西亚群岛疫情爆发,并于2013 - 2014年在法属波利尼西亚引发疫情。此后,该病毒传播到巴西,2015年3月在美洲首次报告了本地寨卡病毒传播病例。该病毒在美洲的迅速传播及其可能与小头畸形和吉兰-巴雷综合征的关联使得寨卡病毒成为一个紧迫的公共卫生问题。《神经病学纪事》2016年;80卷:479 - 489页