iScience (Apr 2023)

Temperature and sex shape Zika virus pathogenicity in the adult Bratcheesehead brain: A Drosophila model for virus-associated neurological diseases

  • Ghada Tafesh-Edwards,
  • Ananda Kalukin,
  • Dean Bunnell,
  • Stanislava Chtarbanova,
  • Ioannis Eleftherianos

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 26, no. 4
p. 106424

Abstract

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Summary: Severe neurological complications affecting brain growth and function have been well documented in newborn and adult patients infected by Zika virus (ZIKV), but the underlying mechanisms remain unknown. Here we use a Drosophila melanogaster mutant, cheesehead (chs), with a mutation in the brain tumor (brat) locus that exhibits both aberrant continued proliferation and progressive neurodegeneration in the adult brain. We report that temperature variability is a key driver of ZIKV pathogenesis, thereby altering host mortality and causing motor dysfunction in a sex-dependent manner. Furthermore, we show that ZIKV is largely localized to the bratchs brain and activates the RNAi and apoptotic immune responses. Our findings establish an in vivo model to study host innate immune responses and highlight the need of evaluating neurodegenerative deficits as a potential comorbidity in ZIKV-infected adults.

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