Adaptation to host cell environment during experimental evolution of Zika virus

Zika virus (ZIKV) infection can cause important developmental and neurological defects in Humans. Type I/III interferon responses control ZIKV infection and pathological processes, yet the virus has evolved various mechanisms to defeat these host responses. Here, we established a pipeline to delinea...

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Veröffentlicht in:Communications biology 2022-10, Vol.5 (1), p.1115-1115, Article 1115
Hauptverfasser: Grass, Vincent, Hardy, Emilie, Kobert, Kassian, Talemi, Soheil Rastgou, Décembre, Elodie, Guy, Coralie, Markov, Peter V., Kohl, Alain, Paris, Mathilde, Böckmann, Anja, Muñoz-González, Sara, Sherry, Lee, Höfer, Thomas, Boussau, Bastien, Dreux, Marlène
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Zika virus (ZIKV) infection can cause important developmental and neurological defects in Humans. Type I/III interferon responses control ZIKV infection and pathological processes, yet the virus has evolved various mechanisms to defeat these host responses. Here, we established a pipeline to delineate at high-resolution the genetic evolution of ZIKV in a controlled host cell environment. We uncovered that serially passaged ZIKV acquired increased infectivity and simultaneously developed a resistance to TLR3-induced restriction. We built a mathematical model that suggests that the increased infectivity is due to a reduced time-lag between infection and viral replication. We found that this adaptation is cell-type specific, suggesting that different cell environments may drive viral evolution along different routes. Deep-sequencing of ZIKV populations pinpointed mutations whose increased frequencies temporally coincide with the acquisition of the adapted phenotype. We functionally validated S455L, a substitution in ZIKV envelope (E) protein, recapitulating the adapted phenotype. Its positioning on the E structure suggests a putative function in protein refolding/stability. Taken together, our results uncovered ZIKV adaptations to the cellular environment leading to accelerated replication onset coupled with resistance to TLR3-induced antiviral response. Our work provides insights into Zika virus adaptation to host cells and immune escape mechanisms. In vitro analyses and computational modelling indicate that Zika virus adapts to the cellular environment of its host over time
ISSN:2399-3642
2399-3642
DOI:10.1038/s42003-022-03902-y