4.5 Article

Zika virus disrupts gene expression in human myoblasts and myotubes: Relationship with susceptibility to infection

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PLOS NEGLECTED TROPICAL DISEASES
卷 16, 期 2, 页码 -

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PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0010166

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资金

  1. FINEP-Brazil [01.16.0078.00]
  2. European Union [734548]
  3. RABICO/CAPES Project [88887.333817/2019-00]
  4. CNPq-Brazil [303170/2017-4]
  5. FAPERJ-Brazil [26/202.903/20]
  6. FIOCRUZ-PASTEUR Program (IR), FIOCRUZ-Brazil
  7. MercoSur Fund for Structural Convergence [FOCEM 03/11]

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This study investigated the mechanisms of Zika virus infection in human skeletal muscle using an in vitro model. The research found that myoblasts are permissive to ZIKV infection, while myotubes control viral replication. Gene expression profiling revealed differences between infected myoblasts and myotubes, with the latter showing pathways related to antiviral and innate immune responses. This study sheds light on potential antiviral mechanisms against ZIKV infection in skeletal muscle.
The tropism of Zika virus (ZIKV) has been described in the nervous system, blood, placenta, thymus, and skeletal muscle. We investigated the mechanisms of skeletal muscle susceptibility to ZIKV using an in vitro model of human skeletal muscle myogenesis, in which myoblasts differentiate into myotubes. Myoblasts were permissive to ZIKV infection, generating productive viral particles, while myotubes controlled ZIKV replication. To investigate the underlying mechanisms, we used gene expression profiling. First, we assessed gene changes in myotubes compared with myoblasts in the model without infection. As expected, we observed an increase in genes and pathways related to the contractile muscle system in the myotubes, a reduction in processes linked to proliferation, migration and cytokine production, among others, confirming the myogenic capacity of our system in vitro. A comparison between non-infected and infected myoblasts revealed more than 500 differentially expressed genes (DEGs). In contrast, infected myotubes showed almost 2,000 DEGs, among which we detected genes and pathways highly or exclusively expressed in myotubes, including those related to antiviral and innate immune responses. Such gene modulation could explain our findings showing that ZIKV also invades myotubes but does not replicate in these differentiated cells. In conclusion, we showed that ZIKV largely (but differentially) disrupts gene expression in human myoblasts and myotubes. Identifying genes involved in myotube resistance can shed light on potential antiviral mechanisms against ZIKV infection. Author summaryThe ZIKV was responsible for a large pandemic surge between 2015 and 2016; Brazil was the epicenter with very high numbers of congenital ZIKV syndrome that included microcephaly, myalgia, among other manifestations. We have observed in previous work that muscle progenitor cells (myoblasts) are infected by ZIKV, while differentiated cells (myotubes) do not present viral proteins. In the present study, we confirmed human myoblasts susceptibility to ZIKV infection and myotubes resistance. In fact, we show that myotubes are also susceptible to ZIKV entry but control the productive infection. We also elucidated the transcriptional mechanisms triggered by the ZIKV, which stimulated a more complex intrinsic antiviral response in myotubes than in myoblasts. Such particular gene modulation of the differentiated cells could offer clues to antiviral mechanisms. It would explain susceptibility differences between adults, where muscle progenitor cells are quiescent in the steady-state, and foetuses that have large amounts of these cells proliferating in order to grow muscles.

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