BACKGROUND
Zika virus (ZIKV) infections reported in recent epidemics have been linked
to clinical complications that had never been associated with ZIKV before.
Adaptive mutations could have contributed to the successful emergence of
ZIKV as a global health threat to a nonimmune population. However, the
causal relationships between the ZIKV genetic determinants, the pathogenesis
and the rapid spread in Latin America and in the Caribbean remain widely
unknown.
OBJECTIVES
The aim of this study was to characterise three ZIKV isolates obtained from
patient samples during the 2015/2016 Brazilian epidemics.
METHODS
The ZIKV genomes of these strains were completely sequenced and
in
vitro
infection kinetics experiments were carried out in cell
lines and human primary cells.
FINDINGS
Eight nonsynonymous substitutions throughout the viral genome of the three
Brazilian isolates were identified. Infection kinetics experiments were
carried out with mammalian cell lines A549, Huh7.5, Vero E6 and human
monocyte-derived dendritic cells (mdDCs) and insect cells (Aag2, C6/36 and
AP61) and suggest that some of these mutations might be associated with
distinct viral fitness. The clinical isolates also presented differences in
their infectivity rates when compared to the well-established ZIKV strains
(MR766 and PE243), especially in their abilities to infect mammalian
cells.
MAIN CONCLUSIONS
Genomic analysis of three recent ZIKV isolates revealed some nonsynonymous
substitutions, which could have an impact on the viral fitness in mammalian
and insect cells.
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