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Publication : Differential contributions of fetal mononuclear phagocytes to Zika virus neuroinvasion versus neuroprotection during congenital infection.

First Author  Abdelbasset M Year  2024
Journal  Cell Volume  187
Issue  26 Pages  7511-7532.e20
PubMed ID  39532096 Mgi Jnum  J:360780
Mgi Id  MGI:7787989 Doi  10.1016/j.cell.2024.10.028
Citation  Abdelbasset M, et al. (2024) Differential contributions of fetal mononuclear phagocytes to Zika virus neuroinvasion versus neuroprotection during congenital infection. Cell
abstractText  Fetal immune cell functions during congenital infections are poorly understood. Zika virus (ZIKV) can vertically transmit from mother to fetus, causing nervous system infection and congenital ZIKV syndrome (CZS). We identified differential functional roles for fetal monocyte/macrophage cell types and microglia in ZIKV dissemination versus clearance using mouse models. Trafficking of ZIKV-infected primitive macrophages from the yolk sac allowed initial fetal virus inoculation, while recruited monocytes promoted non-productive neuroinflammation. Conversely, brain-resident differentiated microglia were protective, limiting infection and neuronal death. Single-cell RNA sequencing identified transcriptional profiles linked to the protective versus detrimental contributions of mononuclear phagocyte subsets. In human brain organoids, microglia also promoted neuroprotective transcriptional changes and infection clearance. Thus, microglia are protective before birth, contrasting with the disease-enhancing roles of primitive macrophages and monocytes. Differential modulation of myeloid cell phenotypes by genetically divergent ZIKVs underscores the potential of immune cells to regulate diverse outcomes during fetal infections.
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