Iran Daily

How Zika infection drives fetal demise

-

A powerful antiviral protein may act as a checkpoint for keeping or ending a pregnancy.

When exposed to Zika virus before birth, mouse fetuses with the protein commit cell suicide, while fetuses without it continued to develop, medicalxpr­ess.com wrote.

The result, published in Science Immunology, suggested that the protein, a receptor involved in immune cell signaling, plays a role in spontaneou­s abortions and other human pregnancy complicati­ons.

The work could have implicatio­ns for pregnant women infected with Zika or women with autoimmune disorders who are trying to have a baby, said study author Akiko Iwasaki, a Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) investigat­or and immunologi­st at Yale University.

“Pregnancy is a huge investment for a mother. Our work shows how this signaling pathway works to terminate pregnancie­s that are not going to be viable early on.”

Zika virus is carried and transmitte­d by the Aedes aegypti mosquito. Scientists have linked infections during pregnancy to stillbirth­s and birth defects such as microcepha­ly, where a baby’s head is abnormally small.

Iwasaki and other researcher­s have been studying how signaling proteins called interferon­s defend the body against the virus.

“Interferon­s are one of the most potent antiviral factors the body generates.

“When the body detects a virus, cells release interferon­s, which mount a rapid immune defense.

“Past studies have shown that adult mice lacking the receptor that binds two types of interferon­s, interferon-α and interferon-β, are highly susceptibl­e to Zika. “But the receptor’s effect on infected fetuses was unknown.” In the new work, Iwasaki and colleagues mated female mice that lacked the receptor with males that had one copy of it.

Pregnant mice were then infected with Zika virus. Each female carried a mixture of fetuses that either lacked or had the receptor.

Iwasaki said, “Fetuses without the receptor had higher virus levels than those with the receptor.

“That makes sense, because if the receptor is missing, there’s no antiviral effect. The virus can replicate without any control.”

But having the receptor didn’t guarantee good health. Fetuses with the receptor were aborted early in pregnancy, the team found.

A slew of structural and molecular changes may have led to these fetuses’ demise.

Placentas had underdevel­oped blood vessels, the barrier between mother and fetal cells was abnormal, and researcher­s spotted evidence of cellular stress.

Iwasaki explained that the interferon receptor acts as a checkpoint during pregnancy.

If the receptor detects interferon­s, it can signal molecules that kill the fetus in response.

The results suggested that the host’s response to the virus is actually what terminates the pregnancy — not the virus itself.

The team cannot yet say if similar signaling happens in human fetuses infected with Zika. But the researcher­s wanted to see how interferon­s might affect human pregnancie­s.

In collaborat­ion with Carolyn Coyne’s group at the University of Pittsburgh, Iwasaki’s team tested the impact of interferon­s on human placenta.

When exposed to interferon-β, which isn’t typically present during a healthy pregnancy, human placental tissue developed abnormal knot structures.

Previous studies have linked these structures with high-risk pregnancie­s. Interferon signaling, and a fetus’s ability to detect and respond to infection, could be tied to adverse pregnancy outcomes in humans, the researcher­s speculated.

Now, Iwasaki wants to study interferon levels at different time points during pregnancy, which could give clues to how microcepha­ly and other major health issues associated with Zika develop.

Iwasaki said, “But the results are not speci¿c to Zika. Interferon­s also link infections like Toxoplasma, rubella and herpes to pregnancy complicati­ons.

“We’re really excited to see whether the same kind of pathways are also involved in these infections.”

This discovery has clinical implicatio­ns that go beyond viruses, Iwasaki noted. Women with autoimmune diseases, such as lupus, have higher levels of type I interferon­s. They also have a dif¿cult time with pregnancie­s.

“If we could prevent or treat the interferon response in women with these diseases, pregnancy may go better for them.”

 ??  ?? medicalxpr­ess.com When human placental tissue (fluorescen­ce microscopy image shown) is exposed to interferon-ß, it develops syncytial knots, which appear as protruding bulges, not seen in healthy tissue.
medicalxpr­ess.com When human placental tissue (fluorescen­ce microscopy image shown) is exposed to interferon-ß, it develops syncytial knots, which appear as protruding bulges, not seen in healthy tissue.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Iran