Department of Biological Science, Florida State University, Tallahassee, Florida, USA.
Department of Biology, Georgia State University, Atlanta, Georgia, USA.
J Virol. 2019 Sep 30;93(20). doi: 10.1128/JVI.00638-19. Print 2019 Oct 15.
Zika virus (ZIKV) infection attenuates the growth of human neural progenitor cells (hNPCs). As these hNPCs generate the cortical neurons during early brain development, the ZIKV-mediated growth retardation potentially contributes to the neurodevelopmental defects of the congenital Zika syndrome. Here, we investigate the mechanism by which ZIKV manipulates the cell cycle in hNPCs and the functional consequence of cell cycle perturbation on the replication of ZIKV and related flaviviruses. We demonstrate that ZIKV, but not dengue virus (DENV), induces DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs), triggering the DNA damage response through the ATM/Chk2 signaling pathway while suppressing the ATR/Chk1 signaling pathway. Furthermore, ZIKV infection impedes the progression of cells through S phase, thereby preventing the completion of host DNA replication. Recapitulation of the S-phase arrest state with inhibitors led to an increase in ZIKV replication, but not of West Nile virus or DENV. Our data identify ZIKV's ability to induce DSBs and suppress host DNA replication, which results in a cellular environment favorable for its replication. Clinically, Zika virus (ZIKV) infection can lead to developmental defects in the cortex of the fetal brain. How ZIKV triggers this event in developing neural cells is not well understood at a molecular level and likely requires many contributing factors. ZIKV efficiently infects human neural progenitor cells (hNPCs) and leads to growth arrest of these cells, which are critical for brain development. Here, we demonstrate that infection with ZIKV, but not dengue virus, disrupts the cell cycle of hNPCs by halting DNA replication during S phase and inducing DNA damage. We further show that ZIKV infection activates the ATM/Chk2 checkpoint but prevents the activation of another checkpoint, the ATR/Chk1 pathway. These results unravel an intriguing mechanism by which an RNA virus interrupts host DNA replication. Finally, by mimicking virus-induced S-phase arrest, we show that ZIKV manipulates the cell cycle to benefit viral replication.
寨卡病毒(ZIKV)感染会削弱人神经祖细胞(hNPCs)的生长。由于这些 hNPCs 在大脑早期发育过程中产生皮质神经元,因此 ZIKV 介导的生长迟缓可能导致先天性寨卡综合征的神经发育缺陷。在这里,我们研究了 ZIKV 操纵 hNPC 细胞周期的机制,以及细胞周期扰动对 ZIKV 和相关黄病毒复制的功能后果。我们证明,ZIKV 而非登革热病毒(DENV)会诱导 DNA 双链断裂(DSBs),通过 ATM/Chk2 信号通路触发 DNA 损伤反应,同时抑制 ATR/Chk1 信号通路。此外,ZIKV 感染会阻碍细胞通过 S 期,从而阻止宿主 DNA 复制的完成。用抑制剂再现 S 期阻滞状态会导致 ZIKV 复制增加,但不会增加西尼罗河病毒或 DENV 的复制。我们的数据表明,ZIKV 诱导 DSBs 和抑制宿主 DNA 复制的能力,导致有利于其复制的细胞环境。临床上,寨卡病毒(ZIKV)感染可导致胎儿大脑皮质发育缺陷。ZIKV 在发育中的神经细胞中引发此事件的机制在分子水平上尚未很好理解,可能需要许多促成因素。ZIKV 能有效地感染人神经祖细胞(hNPCs)并导致这些细胞生长停滞,这对大脑发育至关重要。在这里,我们证明 ZIKV 感染而非登革热病毒感染会通过在 S 期停止 DNA 复制并诱导 DNA 损伤来破坏 hNPC 的细胞周期。我们进一步表明,ZIKV 感染激活 ATM/Chk2 检查点,但阻止另一个检查点,ATR/Chk1 途径的激活。这些结果揭示了一种有趣的机制,即 RNA 病毒中断宿主 DNA 复制。最后,通过模拟病毒诱导的 S 期阻滞,我们表明 ZIKV 操纵细胞周期以有利于病毒复制。