Tulane National Primate Research Center, Tulane University, Covington, LA, USA.
Biomedical Sciences Training Program, Tulane University School of Medicine, New Orleans, LA, USA.
J Neurovirol. 2021 Feb;27(1):116-125. doi: 10.1007/s13365-020-00931-3. Epub 2021 Jan 6.
Astrocytes are an early and important target of Zika virus (ZIKV) infection in the developing brain, but the impacts of infection on astrocyte function remain controversial. Given that nonhuman primate (NHP) models of ZIKV infection replicate aspects of neurologic disease seen in human infections, we cultured primary astrocytes from the brain tissue of infant rhesus macaques and then infected the cells with Asian or African lineage ZIKV to identify transcriptional patterns associated with infection in these cells. The African lineage virus appeared to have greater infectivity and promote stronger antiviral signaling, but infection by either strain ultimately produced typical virus response patterns. Both viruses induced hypoxic stress, but the Asian lineage strain additionally had an effect on metabolic and lipid biosynthesis pathways. Together, these findings describe an NHP astrocyte model that may be used to assess transcriptional signatures following ZIKV infection.
星形胶质细胞是寨卡病毒(ZIKV)在发育中的大脑中感染的早期和重要靶标,但感染对星形胶质细胞功能的影响仍存在争议。鉴于感染寨卡病毒的非人灵长类动物(NHP)模型复制了人类感染中出现的神经疾病的某些方面,我们从婴儿恒河猴的脑组织中培养原代星形胶质细胞,然后用亚洲或非洲谱系寨卡病毒感染这些细胞,以鉴定与这些细胞感染相关的转录模式。非洲谱系病毒似乎具有更高的感染力,并促进更强的抗病毒信号,但两种毒株的感染最终产生了典型的病毒反应模式。两种病毒都诱导了缺氧应激,但亚洲谱系毒株还对代谢和脂质生物合成途径有影响。总之,这些发现描述了一种 NHP 星形胶质细胞模型,可用于评估寨卡病毒感染后的转录特征。