Abdelmalek Clara M, Singh Shriya, Fasil Blain, Horvath Allison R, Mulkey Sarah B, Curé Carlos, Campos Maribel, Cavalcanti Denise P, Tong Van T, Mercado Marcela, Daza Marcela, Marcela Benavides Mónica, Acosta Jacqueline, Gilboa Suzanne, Valencia Diana, Sancken Christina L, Newton Suzanne, Scalabrin Deolinda M F, Mussi-Pinhata Marisa M, Vasconcelos Zilton, Chakhtoura Nahida, Moye Jack, Leslie Elizabeth J, Bulas Dorothy, Vezina Gilbert, Marques Fernanda J P, Leyser Marcio, Del Campo Miguel, Vilain Eric, DeBiasi Roberta L, Wang Tongguang, Nath Avindra, Haydar Tarik, Muenke Max, Mansour Tamer A, du Plessis Adre J, Murray Jeffrey C, Cordero José F, Kousa Youssef A
medRxiv. 2024 May 25:2024.05.24.24307899. doi: 10.1101/2024.05.24.24307899.
Prenatally transmitted viruses can cause severe damage to the developing brain. There is unexplained variability in prenatal brain injury and postnatal neurodevelopmental outcomes, suggesting disease modifiers. Discordant outcomes among dizygotic twins could be explained by genetic susceptibly or protection. Among several well-recognized threats to the developing brain, Zika is a mosquito-borne, positive-stranded RNA virus that was originally isolated in Uganda and spread to cause epidemics in Africa, Asia, and the Americas. In the Americas, the virus caused congenital Zika syndrome and a multitude of neurodevelopmental disorders. As of now, there is no preventative treatment or cure for the adverse outcomes caused by prenatal Zika infection. The Prenatal Infection and Neurodevelopmental Genetics (PING) Consortium was initiated in 2016 to identify factors modulating prenatal brain injury and postnatal neurodevelopmental outcomes for Zika and other prenatal viral infections.
The Consortium has pooled information from eight multi-site studies conducted at 23 research centers in six countries to build a growing clinical and genomic data repository. This repository is being mined to search for modifiers of virally induced brain injury and developmental outcomes. Multilateral partnerships include commitments with Children's National Hospital (USA), (Colombia), the Natural History of Zika Virus Infection in Gestation program (Brazil), and Zika (Brazil), in addition to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the National Institutes of Health.
Our goal in bringing together these sets of patient data was to test the hypothesis that personal and populational genetic differences affect the severity of brain injury after a prenatal viral infection and modify neurodevelopmental outcomes. We have enrolled 4,102 mothers and 3,877 infants with 3,063 biological samples and clinical data covering over 80 phenotypic fields and 5,000 variables. There were several notable challenges in bringing together cohorts enrolled in different studies, including variability in the timepoints evaluated and the collected clinical data and biospecimens. Thus far, we have performed whole exome sequencing on 1,226 participants. Here, we present the Consortium's formation and the overarching study design. We began our investigation with prenatal Zika infection with the goal of applying this knowledge to other prenatal infections and exposures that can affect brain development.
产前传播的病毒可对发育中的大脑造成严重损害。产前脑损伤和产后神经发育结局存在无法解释的变异性,提示存在疾病修饰因素。双卵双胞胎之间不一致的结局可能由遗传易感性或保护性来解释。在几种公认的对发育中大脑的威胁中,寨卡病毒是一种由蚊子传播的正链RNA病毒,最初在乌干达分离出来,后来传播到非洲、亚洲和美洲并引发疫情。在美洲,该病毒导致了先天性寨卡综合征和多种神经发育障碍。截至目前,对于产前寨卡病毒感染所导致的不良结局尚无预防性治疗或治愈方法。产前感染与神经发育遗传学(PING)联盟于2016年成立,旨在确定调节产前脑损伤以及寨卡病毒和其他产前病毒感染的产后神经发育结局的因素。
该联盟汇总了在六个国家的23个研究中心进行的八项多中心研究的信息,以建立一个不断增长的临床和基因组数据库。正在对这个数据库进行挖掘,以寻找病毒诱导的脑损伤和发育结局的修饰因素。多边合作伙伴关系包括与美国儿童国家医院、(哥伦比亚)、妊娠期寨卡病毒感染自然史项目(巴西)以及寨卡(巴西)的合作承诺,此外还有疾病控制和预防中心以及国立卫生研究院。
我们汇集这些患者数据集的目的是检验这样一个假设,即个人和群体的基因差异会影响产前病毒感染后脑损伤的严重程度并改变神经发育结局。我们已招募了4102名母亲和3877名婴儿,收集了3063份生物样本以及涵盖80多个表型领域和5000个变量的临床数据。汇集参与不同研究的队列存在几个显著挑战,包括评估的时间点以及所收集的临床数据和生物样本的变异性。到目前为止,我们已对1226名参与者进行了全外显子组测序。在此,我们介绍该联盟的组建情况和总体研究设计。我们从产前寨卡病毒感染开始调查,目标是将这些知识应用于其他可能影响大脑发育的产前感染和暴露情况。