2020
Zika Virus-Infected Decidual Cells Elicit a Gestational Age-Dependent Innate Immune Response and Exaggerate Trophoblast Zika Permissiveness: Implication for Vertical Transmission.
Guzeloglu-Kayisli O, Guo X, Tang Z, Semerci N, Ozmen A, Larsen K, Mutluay D, Guller S, Schatz F, Kayisli UA, Lockwood CJ. Zika Virus-Infected Decidual Cells Elicit a Gestational Age-Dependent Innate Immune Response and Exaggerate Trophoblast Zika Permissiveness: Implication for Vertical Transmission. The Journal Of Immunology 2020, 205: 3083-3094. PMID: 33139490, DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.2000713.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsHuman decidual cellsDecidual cellsZika virusViral attachment factorsTerm decidual stromal cellsVertical transmissionDecidual cell supernatantsTerm decidual cellsInnate immune response genesInnate immune responsivenessExact pathogenic mechanismDecidual stromal cellsHuman first trimesterInnate immune responseSevere fetal defectsImmune response genesFetal sequelaeGestational ageFirst trimesterPlacental transmissionZIKV infectionCytotrophoblast culturesImmune responsivenessZika infectionLate pregnancy
2016
Zika virus infection of Hofbauer cells
Simoni MK, Jurado KA, Abrahams VM, Fikrig E, Guller S. Zika virus infection of Hofbauer cells. American Journal Of Reproductive Immunology 2016, 77 PMID: 27966815, PMCID: PMC5299062, DOI: 10.1111/aji.12613.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsCongenital Zika syndromeHofbauer cellsZika virusZIKV infectionDevelopment of CZSDengue virusSpread of ZIKVVertical transmissionFetal placental macrophagesPlacental Hofbauer cellsZika virus infectionAntenatal infectionNeonatal outcomesPlacental responsesZika syndromeVirus infectionCurrent evidenceCongenital abnormalitiesRecent studiesNeonatal developmentFetal capillariesRelated flavivirusesInfectionSpecific molecular mechanismsCertain virusesZika virus productively infects primary human placenta-specific macrophages
Jurado KA, Simoni MK, Tang Z, Uraki R, Hwang J, Householder S, Wu M, Lindenbach BD, Abrahams VM, Guller S, Fikrig E. Zika virus productively infects primary human placenta-specific macrophages. JCI Insight 2016, 1: e88461. PMID: 27595140, PMCID: PMC5007065, DOI: 10.1172/jci.insight.88461.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchZika virus infectionHofbauer cellsVirus infectionFetal brainZika virusTerm placental villous explantsHuman placental macrophagesPlacental villous explantsPregnancy complicationsPlacental macrophagesPlacental barrierVillous explantsInfectious virusVillous fibroblastsCongenital defectsInfectionStrong associationMigratory activityVirusMacrophagesBrainCell typesCellsComplicationsFlaviviruses