Abstract

The pathogenic Parvovirus B19 (B19V) is characterized by a strict adaptation to erythroid progenitor cells (EPCs), a heterogeneous population of differentiating cells with diverse phenotypic and functional properties. In our work, we studied the dynamics of B19V infection in EPCs in dependence on the cell differentiation stage, in terms of distribution of infected cells, synthesis of viral nucleic acids and production of infectious virus. EPCs at early differentiation stage led to an abortive infection, without viral genome replication and a very low transcriptional activity. EPCs at later stages were permissive, with highest levels of viral replicative activity at day 9 (+3.0 Log from 2 to 48 hpi) and lower levels at day 18 (+1.5 Log from 2 to 48 hpi). B19V DNA increment was in accordance with the percentage of cells positive to flow-FISH assay (41.4% at day 9, 1.1% at day 18). Quantitation of total RNA indicated a close association of genome replication and transcription with viral RNA accumulation within infected cells related to viral DNA increase during the course of infection. Analysis of the different classes of mRNAs revealed two distinct pattern of genome expression profile with a fine regulation in the frequency utilization of RNA processing signals: an early phase, when cleavage at the proximal site leading to a higher relative production of mRNA for NS protein, and a late phase, when cleavage at the distal site was more frequent leading to higher relative abundance of mRNA for VP and 11 kDA proteins. Infectious virus was released from cells at day 6–15, but not at day 18. Our results, providing a detailed description of B19V replication and expression profile in differentiating EPCs, highlight the very tight adaptation of B19V to a specific cellular target defined both by its erythroid lineage and its differentiation stage.

Highlights

  • In the Parvoviridae family [1], Parvovirus B19 (B19V) is a human virus with an ample pathogenic potential [2,3]

  • B19V has a selective tropism for the erythroid lineage in the bone marrow, where productive infection induces a block in erythropoiesis that can be manifested as a transient or persistent erythroid aplasia [4]

  • A relatively high biological variability was observed in this process, these results indicated a progressive in vitro differentiation of an erythroid progenitor cell population susceptible to B19V infection

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Summary

Introduction

In the Parvoviridae family [1], Parvovirus B19 (B19V) is a human virus with an ample pathogenic potential [2,3]. B19V has a selective tropism for the erythroid lineage in the bone marrow, where productive infection induces a block in erythropoiesis that can be manifested as a transient or persistent erythroid aplasia [4]. Anemia as a consequence of the block in erythropoiesis usually becomes clinically relevant when an underlying condition is present, such as expanded erythropoiesis compensating for hematological disorders, or in case of inadequacy of PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0148547. Parvovirus B19 Infection in Erythroid Progenitor Cells the specific antiviral immune response [5]. The tropism of B19V for erythroid progenitors in liver and bone marrow can lead to fetal anemia, tissue hypoxia, development of non-immune hydrops and/or fetal death [7,8,9]

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