Zika Virus Disrupts Phospho-TBK1 Localization and Mitosis in Human Neuroepithelial Stem Cells and Radial Glia
Author(s) -
Marco Onorati,
Zhen Li,
Fuchen Liu,
André M. M. Sousa,
Naoki Nakagawa,
Mingfeng Li,
Maria Teresa Dell’Anno,
Forrest O. Gulden,
Sirisha Pochareddy,
Andrew T.N. Tebbenkamp,
Wenqi Han,
Mihovil Pletikos,
Tianliuyun Gao,
Ying Zhu,
Candace Bichsel,
Luis Varela,
Klara SzigetiBuck,
Steven Lisgo,
Yalan Zhang,
Anze Testen,
XiaoBing Gao,
Jernej Mlakar,
Mara Popović,
Marie Flamand,
Stephen M. Strittmatter,
Leonard K. Kaczmarek,
E.S. Anton,
Tamas L. Horváth,
Brett D. Lindenbach,
Nenad Šestan
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
cell reports
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.264
H-Index - 154
eISSN - 2639-1856
pISSN - 2211-1247
DOI - 10.1016/j.celrep.2016.08.038
Subject(s) - neuroepithelial cell , mitosis , microbiology and biotechnology , stem cell , zika virus , biology , neural stem cell , neuroscience , virus , virology
The mechanisms underlying Zika virus (ZIKV)-related microcephaly and other neurodevelopment defects remain poorly understood. Here, we describe the derivation and characterization, including single-cell RNA-seq, of neocortical and spinal cord neuroepithelial stem (NES) cells to model early human neurodevelopment and ZIKV-related neuropathogenesis. By analyzing human NES cells, organotypic fetal brain slices, and a ZIKV-infected micrencephalic brain, we show that ZIKV infects both neocortical and spinal NES cells as well as their fetal homolog, radial glial cells (RGCs), causing disrupted mitoses, supernumerary centrosomes, structural disorganization, and cell death. ZIKV infection of NES cells and RGCs causes centrosomal depletion and mitochondrial sequestration of phospho-TBK1 during mitosis. We also found that nucleoside analogs inhibit ZIKV replication in NES cells, protecting them from ZIKV-induced pTBK1 relocalization and cell death. We established a model system of human neural stem cells to reveal cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying neurodevelopmental defects associated with ZIKV infection and its potential treatment.
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