The Zika virus infects a type of neural stem cell that gives rise to the brain’s cerebral cortex. On laboratory dishes, these stem cells were found to be havens for viral reproduction, resulting in cell death and/or disruption of cell growth. While this study does not prove the direct link between Zika and microcephaly, it does pinpoint where the virus may be doing the most damage.
The researchers from Johns Hopkins, Florida State Uni and Emory University School of Medicine, worked around the clock for a month to conduct the study, which provides a new platform to learn about the Zika virus using neuronal cells derived from human induced pluripotent stem cells. In the near future, the researchers hope to grow mini-brains from the stem cells to observe the long-term effects of Zika infection on neural tissue and to screen for potential therapeutics.
As humans are typically infected by Zika virus carried by mosquitoes, the researchers also grew their Zika virus stock in mosquito cells for a few days before applying the virus onto the human cells used in all of their infection experiments. One concerning discovery was that the stem cells that Zika was found to infect, cortical neural precursors, become factories for viral replication. From a single infection, the virus particles spread through a plate of stem cells within a span of 3 days. There’s also no evidence that the cells are employing antiviral responses, which means we don’t know whether or how the virus is being cleared from the precursor cells.
There are several other questions left to answer as well: why are the symptoms in adults so mild? How is the virus entering the nervous system of the developing fetus? Zika infects adults when mosquitoes deposit the virus on human skin, and our immune cells carry it into the blood. But how is the virus crossing the blood-brain barrier? And could Zika infect the small population of neural stem cells that adults keep above the brain stem in their hippocampus? “We are trying to fill the knowledge gap between the infection and potential neurological defects,” says Hengli Tang. “We hope our results will help educate the public and government decision makers because they need to have more information on this virus, and we have to take it seriously,” Song says. http://medicalxpress.com/news/2016-03-zika-virus-infects-human-neural.html
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