Abstract

Zika virus (ZIKV), without a vaccine or an effective treatment approved to date, has globally spread in the last century. The infection caused by ZIKV in humans has changed progressively from mild to subclinical in recent years, causing epidemics with greater infectivity, tropism towards new tissues and other related symptoms as a product of various emergent ZIKV–host cell interactions. However, it is still unknown why or how the RNA genome structure impacts those interactions in differential evolutionary origin strains. Moreover, the genomic comparison of ZIKV strains from the sequence-based phylogenetic analysis is well known, but differences from RNA structure comparisons have barely been studied. Thus, in order to understand the RNA genome variability of lineages of various geographic distributions better, 410 complete genomes in a phylogenomic scanning were used to study the conservation of structured RNAs. Our results show the contemporary landscape of conserved structured regions with unique conserved structured regions in clades or in lineages within circulating ZIKV strains. We propose these structures as candidates for further experimental validation to establish their potential role in vital functions of the viral cycle of ZIKV and their possible associations with the singularities of different outbreaks that lead to ZIKV populations to acquire nucleotide substitutions, which is evidence of the local structure genome differentiation.

Highlights

  • Zika virus (ZIKV) was first identified in Rhesus monkeys in the Zika forests of Uganda in 1947

  • At the beginning of the XXI century, outbreaks of the virus began in countries of the island complex of Oceania, where new symptoms were associated, such as Guillain-Barré Syndrome (GBS), an autoimmune disease in which the immune system attacks the nervous system of the affected person [2]

  • Since its dispersion in America in 2015, the virus infection started to be associated with congenital fetal microcephaly and neurological damage caused by the virus’s vertical transfer between the mother and fetus [3,4]

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Summary

Introduction

Zika virus (ZIKV) was first identified in Rhesus monkeys in the Zika forests of Uganda in 1947. At the beginning of the XXI century, outbreaks of the virus began in countries of the island complex of Oceania, where new symptoms were associated, such as Guillain-Barré Syndrome (GBS), an autoimmune disease in which the immune system attacks the nervous system of the affected person [2]. ZIKV is a single-stranded positive-sense RNA arbovirus within the Flavivirus genus [7], the genus to which other known viruses of public health importance belong, such as Dengue (DENV), yellow fever (YFV), or West Nile Virus (WNV) [8].

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