duramycin has been researched along with Zika-Virus-Infection* in 2 studies
1 review(s) available for duramycin and Zika-Virus-Infection
Article | Year |
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Preventive and therapeutic challenges in combating Zika virus infection: are we getting any closer?
The neuroteratogenic nature of Zika Virus (ZIKV) infection has converted what would have been a tropical disease into a global threat. Zika is transmitted vertically via infected placental cells especially in the first and second trimesters. In the developing central nervous system (CNS), ZIKV can infect and induce apoptosis of neural progenitor cells subsequently causing microcephaly as well as other neuronal complications in infants. Its ability to infect multiple cell types (placental, dermal, and neural) and increased environmental stability as compared to other flaviviruses (FVs) has broadened the transmission routes for ZIKV infection from vector-mediated to transmitted via body fluids. To further complicate the matters, it is genetically similar (about 40%) with the four serotypes of dengue virus (DENV), so much so that it can almost be called a fifth DENV serotype. This homology poses the risk of causing cross-reactive immune responses and subsequent antibody-dependent enhancement (ADE) of infection in case of secondary infections or for immunized individuals. All of these factors complicate the development of a single preventive vaccine candidate or a pharmacological intervention that will completely eliminate or cure ZIKV infection. We discuss all of these factors in detail in this review and conclude that a combinatorial approach including immunization and treatment might prove to be the winning strategy. Topics: Antiviral Agents; Bacteriocins; Combined Modality Therapy; Cyclohexylamines; Dengue Virus; Female; Fetus; Humans; Infectious Disease Transmission, Vertical; Microcephaly; Peptides; Pregnancy; Pregnancy Complications, Infectious; Severe Dengue; Thiophenes; Viral Vaccines; Zika Virus; Zika Virus Infection | 2017 |
1 other study(ies) available for duramycin and Zika-Virus-Infection
Article | Year |
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Zika Virus Targets Different Primary Human Placental Cells, Suggesting Two Routes for Vertical Transmission.
Zika virus (ZIKV) infection during pregnancy is linked to severe birth defects, but mother-to-fetus transmission routes are unknown. We infected different primary cell types from mid- and late-gestation placentas and explants from first-trimester chorionic villi with the prototype Ugandan and a recently isolated Nicaraguan ZIKV strain. ZIKV infects primary human placental cells and explants-cytotrophoblasts, endothelial cells, fibroblasts, and Hofbauer cells in chorionic villi and amniotic epithelial cells and trophoblast progenitors in amniochorionic membranes-that express Axl, Tyro3, and/or TIM1 viral entry cofactors. ZIKV produced NS3 and E proteins and generated higher viral titers in amniotic epithelial cells from mid-gestation compared to late-gestation placentas. Duramycin, a peptide that binds phosphatidylethanolamine in enveloped virions and precludes TIM1 binding, reduced ZIKV infection in placental cells and explants. Our results suggest that ZIKV spreads from basal and parietal decidua to chorionic villi and amniochorionic membranes and that targeting TIM1 could suppress infection at the uterine-placental interface. Topics: Antiviral Agents; Bacteriocins; Cells, Cultured; Female; Hepatitis A Virus Cellular Receptor 1; Humans; Infectious Disease Transmission, Vertical; Organ Culture Techniques; Peptides; Placenta; Pregnancy; Receptors, Virus; Viral Tropism; Virus Internalization; Zika Virus; Zika Virus Infection | 2016 |