Back to Search Start Over

FETAL BRAIN DAMAGE IN HUMAN FETUSES WITH CONGENITAL CYTOMEGALOVIRUS INFECTION: HISTOLOGICAL FEATURES AND VIRAL TROPISM

Authors :
Liliana Gabrielli
Piccirilli Giulia
Gabrielli Liliana
Bonasoni Maria Paola
Chiereghin Angela
Turello Gabriele
Borgatti Eva Caterina
Simonazzi Giuliana
Felici Silvia
Leone Marta
Salfi Nunzio Cosimo Mario
Santini Donatella
Lazzarotto Tiziana
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Research Square Platform LLC, 2022.

Abstract

Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) causes congenital neurological lifelong disabilities. To date, the neuropathogenesis of brain injury related to congenital HCMV (cCMV) infection is poorly understood. This study evaluates the characteristics and pathogenetic mechanisms of encephalic damage in cCMV infection. Ten HCMV-infected human fetuses at 21 weeks of gestation were examined. Specifically, tissues from different brain areas were analyzed by: i) immunohistochemistry (IHC) to detect HCMV-infected cell distribution, ii) hematoxylin-eosin staining to evaluate histological damage and iii) real-time PCR to quantify tissue viral load (HCMV-DNA). The differentiation stage of HCMV-infected neural/neuronal cells was assessed by double IHC to detect simultaneously HCMV-antigens and neural/neuronal markers: nestin (expressed in early differentiation stage), doublecortin (DCX, identifying neural cells with determined lineage) and neuronal nuclei (NeuN, identifying mature neurons). HCMV-positive cells and viral DNA were found in the brain of 8/10 (80%) fetuses. For these cases, brain damage was classified as mild (n=4, 50%), moderate (n=3, 37.5%) and severe (n=1, 12.5%) based on presence and frequency of pathological findings (necrosis, microglial nodules, microglial activation, astrocytosis and vascular changes). The highest median HCMV-DNA level was found in the hippocampus (212 copies/5ng of humanDNA [hDNA], range: 10-7,505) as well as the highest mean HCMV-infected cell value (2.9 cells, range: 0-23), followed by that detected in subventricular zone (1.8 cells, range: 0-19). This suggested a preferential viral tropism for neural stem/progenitor cells (NSPCs), residing in these regions, confirmed by the expression of DCX and nestin in 94% and 63.3% of HCMV-positive cells, respectively. NeuN was not found among HCMV-positive cells and was nearly absent in the brain with severe damage, suggesting HCMV does not infect mature neurons and NSPCs do not differentiate into neurons. This could lead to known structural and functional brain defects from cCMV infection.

Subjects

Subjects :
nervous system
viruses

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........ce8bb5a517abad8c49076a980c53f817