3.8 Review

Host-Viral Interactions at the Maternal-Fetal Interface. What We Know and What We Need to Know

Journal

FRONTIERS IN VIROLOGY
Volume 2, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fviro.2022.833106

Keywords

placenta; HIV-1; human cytomegalovirus; Zika; vertical transmission; cytotrophoblast; Hofbauer cell; natural killer cell

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Funding

  1. This work was supported by AI131566 (RC), HD97843 (RC and EJ), and HD103498 (RC). [AI131566, HD97843, HD103498]

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This review explores the immune responses of the decidual and placental tissues during maternal viral infections (HIV, HCMV, and Zika virus). These infections can lead to adverse pregnancy outcomes, including placental inflammation, vertical transmission, impaired infant immunity, and poor clinical outcomes in exposed infants. Further research is needed in this field to improve our understanding of neonatal immune programming during maternal mono- and co-infection.
In humans, the hemochorial placenta is a unique temporary organ that forms during pregnancy to support fetal development, gaseous exchange, delivery of nutrition, removal of waste products, and provides immune protection, while maintaining tolerance to the HLA-haploidentical fetus. In this review, we characterize decidual and placental immunity during maternal viral (co)-infection with HIV-1, human cytomegalovirus (HCMV), and Zika virus. We discuss placental immunology, clinical presentation, and epidemiology, before characterizing host susceptibility and cellular tropism, and how the three viruses gain access into specific placental target cells. We describe current knowledge on host-viral interactions with decidual and stromal human placental macrophages or Hofbauer cells, trophoblasts including extra villous trophoblasts, T cells, and decidual natural killer (dNK) cells. These clinically significant viral infections elicit both innate and adaptive immune responses to control replication. However, the three viruses either during mono- or co-infection (HIV-1 and HCMV) escape detection to initiate placental inflammation associated with viral transmission to the developing fetus. Aside from congenital or perinatal infection, other adverse pregnancy outcomes include preterm labor and spontaneous abortion. In addition, maternal HIV-1 and HCMV co-infection are associated with impaired fetal and infant immunity in postnatal life and poor clinical outcomes during childhood in exposed infants, even in the absence of vertical transmission of HIV-1. Given the rapidly expanding numbers of HIV-1-exposed uninfected infants and children globally, further research is urgently needed on neonatal immune programming during maternal mono-and co-infection. This review therefore includes sections on current knowledge gaps that may prompt future research directions. These gaps reflect an emerging but poorly characterized field. Their significance and potential investigation is underscored by the fact that although viral infections result in adverse consequences in both mother and developing fetus/newborn, antiviral and immunomodulatory therapies can improve clinical outcomes in the dyad.

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