Zika virus infection can result in devastating pregnancy outcomes when it crosses the placental barrier. For human pregnancies, the mechanisms of vertical transmission remain enigmatic. Utilizing a human placenta-cotyledon perfusion model, we examined Zika virus exposure in the absence of maternal factors. To distinguish responses related to viral infection vs. recognition, we evaluated cotyledons perfused with either active or inactivated Zika virus. Active Zika virus exposure resulted in infection, cell death and syncytium injury. Pathology corresponded with transcriptional changes related to inflammation and innate immunity. Inactive Zika virus exposure also led to syncytium injury and related changes in gene expression but not cell death. Our observations reveal pathologies and innate immune responses that are dependent on infection or virus placenta interactions independent of productive infection. Importantly, our findings indicate that Zika virus can infect and compromise placentas in the absence of maternal humoral factors that may be protective.© 2022. This is a U.S. government work and not under copyright protection in the U.S.; foreign copyright protection may apply.
About The Expert
Diana L Villazana-Kretzer
Kathryn McGuckin Wuertz
Daniel Newhouse
Jennifer R Damicis
Elisabeth M Dornisch
Kathleen M Voss
Antonio E Muruato
Jennifer A Paymaster
Stacey S Schmiedecke
Sarah M Edwards
Peter G Napolitano
Jennifer Tisoncik-Go
Nicholas Ieronimakis
Michael Gale
References
PubMed