Frontiers in Microbiology (Feb 2021)

Recovery of Synthetic Zika Virus Based on Rio-U1 Isolate Using a Genetically Stable Two Plasmid System and cDNA Amplification

  • Iasmim Silva de Mello,
  • Déberli Ruiz Fernandes,
  • Nathália Dias Furtado,
  • Alexandre Araújo Cunha dos Santos,
  • Marta Pereira dos Santos,
  • Ieda Pereira Ribeiro,
  • Lidiane Menezes Souza Raphael,
  • Mônica da Silva Nogueira,
  • Stephanie Oliveira Diaz da Cruz,
  • Adalgiza da Silva Rocha,
  • Pedro Paulo de Abreu Manso,
  • Marcelo Pelajo-Machado,
  • Myrna Cristina Bonaldo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2021.639655
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

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In 2016, the world experienced the unprecedented Zika epidemic. The ZIKV emerged as a major human pathogen due to its association with the impairment of perinatal development and Guillain–Barré syndrome. The occurrence of these severe cases of Zika points to the significance of studies for understanding the molecular determinants of flavivirus pathogenesis. Reverse genetics is a powerful method for studying the replication and determinants of pathogenesis, virulence, and viral attenuation of flaviviruses, facilitating the design of vaccines and therapeutics. However, the main hurdle in the development of infectious clones is the instability of full-length cDNA in Escherichia coli. Here, we described the development of a genetically stable and efficient infectious clone based on the ZIKV Rio-U1 isolated in the 2016 epidemic in Brazil. The employed strategy consisted of cloning the viral cDNA genome into two stable plasmid subclones and obtaining a high-quality cDNA template with increment in DNA mass for in vitro transcription by PCR amplification. The strategy for developing a ZIKV infectious cDNA clone designed in this study was successful, yielding a replicative and efficient clone-derived virus with high similarities with its parental virus, Rio-U1, by comparison of the proliferation capacity in mammal and insect cells. The infection of AG129 immunocompromised mice caused identical mortality rates, with similar disease progression and morbidity in the animals infected with the parental and the cDNA-derived virus. Histopathological analyses of mouse brains infected with the parental and the cDNA-derived viruses revealed a similar pathogenesis degree. We observed meningoencephalitis, cellular pyknosis, and neutrophilic invasion adjacent to the choroid plexus and perivascular cuffs with the presence of neutrophils. The developed infectious clone will be a tool for genetic and functional studies in vitro and in vivo to understand viral infection and pathogenesis better.

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