Stem Cell Reports (Mar 2017)

Differential Responses of Human Fetal Brain Neural Stem Cells to Zika Virus Infection

  • Erica L. McGrath,
  • Shannan L. Rossi,
  • Junling Gao,
  • Steven G. Widen,
  • Auston C. Grant,
  • Tiffany J. Dunn,
  • Sasha R. Azar,
  • Christopher M. Roundy,
  • Ying Xiong,
  • Deborah J. Prusak,
  • Bradford D. Loucas,
  • Thomas G. Wood,
  • Yongjia Yu,
  • Ildefonso Fernández-Salas,
  • Scott C. Weaver,
  • Nikos Vasilakis,
  • Ping Wu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.stemcr.2017.01.008
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 3
pp. 715 – 727

Abstract

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Zika virus (ZIKV) infection causes microcephaly in a subset of infants born to infected pregnant mothers. It is unknown whether human individual differences contribute to differential susceptibility of ZIKV-related neuropathology. Here, we use an Asian-lineage ZIKV strain, isolated from the 2015 Mexican outbreak (Mex1-7), to infect primary human neural stem cells (hNSCs) originally derived from three individual fetal brains. All three strains of hNSCs exhibited similar rates of Mex1-7 infection and reduced proliferation. However, Mex1-7 decreased neuronal differentiation in only two of the three stem cell strains. Correspondingly, ZIKA-mediated transcriptome alterations were similar in these two strains but significantly different from that of the third strain with no ZIKV-induced neuronal reduction. This study thus confirms that an Asian-lineage ZIKV strain infects primary hNSCs and demonstrates a cell-strain-dependent response of hNSCs to ZIKV infection.

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