Postnatal Identification of Zika Virus Peptides from Saliva
We explored the potential to diagnose Zika virus (ZIKV) infection by analyzing peptides in saliva during a convalescent phase of infection, long after resolution of acute disease. A 25-y-old woman clinically diagnosed with Zika fever in the first trimester was enrolled with her dizygotic twins for a...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of dental research 2017-09, Vol.96 (10), p.1078-1084 |
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Zusammenfassung: | We explored the potential to diagnose Zika virus (ZIKV) infection by analyzing peptides
in saliva during a convalescent phase of infection, long after resolution of acute
disease. A 25-y-old woman clinically diagnosed with Zika fever in the first trimester was
enrolled with her dizygotic twins for a 3-mo postnatal sample of saliva (9-mo after
maternal infection). The female baby (A) had microcephaly while the male baby (B) was born
healthy. Peptidomic analysis was completed by mass spectrometry (MS/MS), and ZIKV peptides
were identified using the National Institutes of Health Zika Virus Resource database, then
aligned and mapped to the ZIKV polyprotein to determine proteome coverage and phylogenetic
studies. A total of 423 (mother), 607 (baby A), and 183 (baby B) unique ZIKV peptides were
identified in saliva by MS/MS, providing a coverage of 67%, 84%, and 45%, respectively, of
the entire ZIKV polyprotein (>3,400 amino acids). All peptides were aligned to other
flaviviruses that are circulating in Brazil (dengue and yellow fever) to discard
false-positive matches. Nine peptides identified were highly conserved to dengue virus.
Alignment of a contiguous peptide sequence for mother/babies with the 74 ZIKV sequences
suggested that the virus may have entered the oral cavity through the salivary glands,
leading to an infection that persists into the postnatal period (vertical transmission).
Furthermore, we identified 9 sequence variations that were unique to the baby with
microcephaly (not found in the mother or the twin). This sequence information could
provide a template for future neuropathogenic studies. A much larger sample size is
required to determine whether sequence variation in the envelope protein significantly
associates with microcephaly. Finally, from a public health perspective, it will be
important to determine whether viral replication is still taking place after birth and
whether the virus can be transmitted through salivary contact. |
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ISSN: | 0022-0345 1544-0591 |
DOI: | 10.1177/0022034517723325 |