ZIKV disrupts placental ultrastructure and drug transporter expression in mice

2021 
Congenital Zika virus (ZIKV) infection can induce fetal brain abnormalities. Here, we investigated whether maternal ZIKV infection may affect placental physiology and metabolic transport potential, and impact the fetal outcome, regardless of viral presence in the fetus at term. Low (103 PFU-ZIKVPE243; low-ZIKV) and high (5x107 PFU-ZIKVPE243; high-ZIKV) virus titers were injected into immunocompetent (ICompetent C57BL/6) and immunocompromised (ICompromised A129) mice at gestational day (GD)12.5 for tissue collection at GD18.5 (term). High-ZIKV elicited fetal death rates of 66% and 100%, whereas low-ZIKV induced fetal death rates of 0% and 60% in C57BL/6 and A129 dams, respectively. All surviving fetuses exhibited intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR) and decreased placental efficiency. High-ZIKV infection in C57BL/6 and A129 mice resulted in virus detection in maternal spleens and placenta, but only A129 fetuses presented virus RNA in the brains. Nevertheless, pregnancies of both strains produced fetuses with decreased head sizes (p
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