Laboratory of Neurological Infections and Immunity, Neuroimmunology Section; Rocky Mountain Laboratories; National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID); National Institutes of Health (NIH); Hamilton, Montana, United States of America.
Genomics Research Section, Research Technologies Branch; Rocky Mountain Laboratories; National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID); National Institutes of Health (NIH); Hamilton, Montana, United States of America.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2023 Oct 5;17(10):e0011657. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0011657. eCollection 2023 Oct.
Since emerging in French Polynesia and Brazil in the 2010s, Zika virus (ZIKV) has been associated with fetal congenital disease. Previous studies have compared ancestral and epidemic ZIKV strains to identify strain differences that may contribute to vertical transmission and fetal disease. However, within-host diversity in ZIKV populations during vertical transmission has not been well studied. Here, we used the established anti-interferon treated Rag1-/- mouse model of ZIKV vertical transmission to compare genomic variation within ZIKV populations in matched placentas, fetal bodies, and fetal brains via RNASeq. At early stages of vertical transmission, the ZIKV populations in the matched placentas and fetal bodies were similar. Most ZIKV single nucleotide variants were present in both tissues, indicating little to no restriction in transmission of ZIKV variants from placenta to fetus. In contrast, at later stages of fetal infection there was a sharp reduction in ZIKV diversity in fetal bodies and fetal brains. All fetal brain ZIKV populations were comprised of one of two haplotypes, containing either a single variant or three variants together, as largely homogenous populations. In most cases, the dominant haplotype present in the fetal brain was also the dominant haplotype present in the matched fetal body. However, in two of ten fetal brains the dominant ZIKV haplotype was undetectable or present at low frequencies in the matched placenta and fetal body ZIKV populations, suggesting evidence of a strict selective bottleneck and possible selection for certain variants during neuroinvasion of ZIKV into fetal brains.
自 21 世纪 10 年代在法属波利尼西亚和巴西出现以来,寨卡病毒(ZIKV)一直与胎儿先天性疾病有关。以前的研究比较了祖代和流行的 ZIKV 株,以确定可能导致垂直传播和胎儿疾病的菌株差异。然而,垂直传播过程中 ZIKV 种群内的宿主内多样性尚未得到很好的研究。在这里,我们使用已建立的抗干扰素处理 Rag1-/- 小鼠 ZIKV 垂直传播模型,通过 RNASeq 比较匹配的胎盘、胎儿体和胎儿脑中 ZIKV 种群的基因组变异。在垂直传播的早期阶段,匹配的胎盘和胎儿体中的 ZIKV 种群相似。大多数 ZIKV 单核苷酸变异都存在于两种组织中,表明 ZIKV 变异从胎盘向胎儿传播的限制很小或没有。相比之下,在胎儿感染的后期阶段,胎儿体和胎儿脑中的 ZIKV 多样性急剧下降。所有胎儿脑 ZIKV 种群都由两种单倍型之一组成,包含单一变异或三个变异一起,作为高度同质的种群。在大多数情况下,存在于胎儿脑中的优势单倍型也是存在于匹配的胎儿体中的优势单倍型。然而,在十个胎儿脑中的两个中,优势 ZIKV 单倍型在匹配的胎盘和胎儿体 ZIKV 种群中无法检测到或存在低频率,表明存在严格的选择瓶颈和 ZIKV 进入胎儿脑时某些变异的可能选择的证据。