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Zika virus productively infects primary human placenta-specific macrophages
Kellie Ann Jurado, Michael K. Simoni, Zhonghua Tang, Ryuta Uraki, Jesse Hwang, Sarah Householder, Mingjie Wu, Brett D. Lindenbach, Vikki M. Abrahams, Seth Guller, Erol Fikrig
Kellie Ann Jurado, Michael K. Simoni, Zhonghua Tang, Ryuta Uraki, Jesse Hwang, Sarah Householder, Mingjie Wu, Brett D. Lindenbach, Vikki M. Abrahams, Seth Guller, Erol Fikrig
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Research Article Reproductive biology Virology

Zika virus productively infects primary human placenta-specific macrophages

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Abstract

The strong association of Zika virus infection with congenital defects has led to questions of how a flavivirus is capable of crossing the placental barrier to reach the fetal brain. Here, we demonstrate permissive Zika virus infection of primary human placental macrophages, commonly referred to as Hofbauer cells, and placental villous fibroblasts. We also demonstrate Zika virus infection of Hofbauer cells within the context of the tissue ex vivo using term placental villous explants. In addition to amplifying infectious virus within a usually inaccessible area, the putative migratory activities of Hofbauer cells may aid in dissemination of Zika virus to the fetal brain. Understanding the susceptibility of placenta-specific cell types will aid future work around and understanding of Zika virus–associated pregnancy complications.

Authors

Kellie Ann Jurado, Michael K. Simoni, Zhonghua Tang, Ryuta Uraki, Jesse Hwang, Sarah Householder, Mingjie Wu, Brett D. Lindenbach, Vikki M. Abrahams, Seth Guller, Erol Fikrig

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Figure 2

Primary human placental-specific macrophages are infected within the context of placental tissue.

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Primary human placental-specific macrophages are infected within the con...
Villous tissue explants (60 mg) were infected with ZIKV within 2 hours of delivery, formalin fixed after 48 hours, and paraffin embedded. Sections were fluorescently labeled with mouse monoclonal J2 to detect viral dsRNA or NS1 to detect viral nonstructural protein and anti-CD163 macrophage cell marker. White arrows indicate infected HBCs.

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