Zika Virus Replicates in the Vagina of Mice with Intact Interferon Signaling

J Virol. 2022 Aug 30:e0121922. doi: 10.1128/jvi.01219-22. Online ahead of print.ABSTRACTZika virus (ZIKV) is unusual among flaviviruses in its ability to spread between humans through sexual contact, as well as by mosquitoes. Sexual transmission has the potential to change the epidemiology and geographic range of ZIKV compared to mosquito-borne transmission and potentially could produce distinct clinical manifestations, so it is important to understand the host mechanisms that control susceptibility to sexually transmitted ZIKV. ZIKV replicates poorly in wild-type mice following subcutaneous inoculation, so most ZIKV pathogenesis studies use mice lacking type I interferon (IFN-αβ) signaling (e.g., Ifnar1-/-). We found that wild-type mice support ZIKV replication following intravaginal infection, consistent with prior studies, although the infection remained localized to the lower female reproductive tract. Vaginal ZIKV infection required a high-progesterone state (pregnancy or pretreatment with depot medroxyprogesterone acetate [DMPA]) even in Ifnar1-/- mice that otherwise are highly susceptible to ZIKV infection. Progesterone-mediated susceptibility did not appear to result from a compromised epithelial barrier, blunted antiviral gene induction, or changes in vaginal leukocyte populations, leaving open the mechanism by which progesterone confers susceptibility to vaginal ZIKV infection. DMPA treatment is a key component of mouse vaginal infection models for herpes simplex ...
Source: Herpes - Category: Infectious Diseases Authors: Source Type: research