4.7 Article

Zika virus infection disrupts neurovascular development and results in postnatal microcephaly with brain damage

Journal

DEVELOPMENT
Volume 143, Issue 22, Pages 4127-4136

Publisher

COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/dev.143768

Keywords

ZIKV; Microcephaly; Blood-brain barrier (BBB); Astrogliosis; Microglial activation

Funding

  1. Office of the Vice President for Research (OVPR) at University of Georgia
  2. National Institutes of Health [R00HD073269, R01NS096176, R01NS097231, HD046860, AI111242]

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Zika virus (ZIKV) infection of pregnant women can result in fetal brain abnormalities. It has been established that ZIKV disrupts neural progenitor cells (NPCs) and leads to embryonic microcephaly. However, the fate of other cell types in the developing brain and their contributions to ZIKV-associated brain abnormalities remain largely unknown. Using intracerebral inoculation of embryonic mouse brains, we found that ZIKV infection leads to postnatal growth restriction including microcephaly. In addition to cell cycle arrest and apoptosis of NPCs, ZIKV infection causes massive neuronal death and axonal rarefaction, which phenocopy fetal brain abnormalities in humans. Importantly, ZIKV infection leads to abnormal vascular density and diameter in the developing brain, resulting in a leaky blood-brain barrier (BBB). Massive neuronal death and BBB leakage indicate brain damage, which is further supported by extensive microglial activation and astrogliosis in virally infected brains. Global gene analyses reveal dysregulation of genes associated with immune responses in virus-infected brains. Thus, our data suggest that ZIKV triggers a strong immune response and disrupts neurovascular development, resulting in postnatal microcephaly with extensive brain damage.

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