Wadsworth Center, New York State Department of Health, Albany, New York 12201, and
Department of Biomedical Sciences, University of Albany School of Public Health, Albany, New York 12214.
J Neurosci. 2019 Jul 3;39(27):5393-5403. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2666-18.2019. Epub 2019 May 13.
Exposure of the developing fetus to Zika virus (ZIKV) results in a set of brain abnormalities described as the congenital Zika syndrome. Although microcephaly is the most obvious outcome, neuropathologies, such as intracranial calcifications and polymicrogyria, can occur in the absence of microcephaly. Moreover, the full impact of exposure on motor, social, and cognitive skills during development remains uncharacterized. We examined the long-term neurobehavioral consequences of neonatal ZIKV exposure in four genetically divergent inbred mouse strains (C57BL/6J, 129S1/SvImJ, FVB/NJ, and DBA/2J). Male and female mice were infected on postnatal day 1, considered comparable with exposure late in the second trimester of humans. We demonstrate strain differences in early susceptibility to the virus and the time course of glial reaction in the brain. These changes were associated with strain- and sex-dependent differences in long-term behavioral abnormalities that include hyperactivity, impulsiveness, and motor incoordination. In addition, the adult brains of susceptible mice exhibited widespread calcifications that may underlie the behavioral deficits observed. Characterization of the neuropathological sequelae of developmental exposure to the Zika virus in different immunocompetent mouse strains provides a foundation for identifying genetic and immune factors that contribute to long-term neurobehavioral consequences in susceptible individuals. Developmental Zika virus (ZIKV) infection is now known to cause brain abnormalities in infants that do not display microcephaly at birth, and the full impact of these more subtle neuropathologies has yet to be determined. We demonstrate in a mouse model that long-lasting behavioral aberrations occur after developmental ZIKV exposure. We compare four divergent mouse strains and find that the effects of Zika infection differ greatly between strains, in terms of behavioral changes, sex differences, and the intracranial calcifications that develop in the brains of susceptible mice. These findings provide a foundation for identifying susceptibility factors that lead to the development of abnormal behaviors secondary to ZIKV infection early in life.
Zika 病毒(ZIKV)对发育中胎儿的暴露会导致一系列被描述为先天性 Zika 综合征的脑部异常。虽然小头畸形是最明显的结果,但在没有小头畸形的情况下,也可能发生颅内钙化和多小脑回等神经病理学改变。此外,暴露对发育过程中的运动、社交和认知技能的全面影响仍未得到描述。我们检查了四种遗传上不同的近交系小鼠(C57BL/6J、129S1/SvImJ、FVB/NJ 和 DBA/2J)中新生 ZIKV 暴露的长期神经行为后果。雄性和雌性小鼠在出生后第 1 天感染,这相当于人类妊娠中期晚期的暴露。我们证明了病毒早期易感性和大脑中神经胶质反应的时间进程存在品系差异。这些变化与长期行为异常的品系和性别依赖性差异相关,包括多动、冲动和运动不协调。此外,易感小鼠的成年大脑表现出广泛的钙化,这可能是观察到的行为缺陷的基础。在不同免疫功能正常的小鼠品系中,对发育性 ZIKV 暴露的神经病理学后果进行表征,为确定导致易感个体长期神经行为后果的遗传和免疫因素奠定了基础。现在已知发育性 Zika 病毒(ZIKV)感染会导致婴儿的脑部异常,这些婴儿在出生时不显示小头畸形,而这些更微妙的神经病理学的全部影响尚未确定。我们在小鼠模型中证明,发育性 ZIKV 暴露后会出现持久的行为异常。我们比较了四个不同的小鼠品系,发现 Zika 感染的影响在行为变化、性别差异和易感小鼠大脑中发生的颅内钙化方面在品系之间有很大差异。这些发现为确定导致生命早期 ZIKV 感染后出现异常行为的易感性因素奠定了基础。