Abstract

The mosquito-borne Rift Valley fever (RVF) is a prioritised disease that has been listed by the World Health Organization for urgent research and development of counteraction. Rift Valley fever virus (RVFV) can cause a cytopathogenic effect in the infected cell and induce hyperimmune responses that contribute to pathogenesis. In livestock, the consequences of RVFV infection vary from mild symptoms to abortion. In humans, 1–3% of patients with RVFV infection develop severe disease, manifested as, for example, haemorrhagic fever, encephalitis or blindness. RVFV infection has also been associated with miscarriage in humans. During pregnancy, there should be a balance between pro-inflammatory and anti-inflammatory mediators to create a protective environment for the placenta and foetus. Many viruses are capable of penetrating that protective environment and infecting the foetal–maternal unit, possibly via the trophoblasts in the placenta, with potentially severe consequences. Whether it is the viral infection per se, the immune response, or both that contribute to the pathogenesis of miscarriage remains unknown. To investigate how RVFV could contribute to pathogenesis during pregnancy, we infected two human trophoblast cell lines, A3 and Jar, representing normal and transformed human villous trophoblasts, respectively. They were infected with two RVFV variants (wild-type RVFV and RVFV with a deleted NSs protein), and the infection kinetics and 15 different cytokines were analysed. The trophoblast cell lines were infected by both RVFV variants and infection caused upregulation of messenger RNA (mRNA) expression for interferon (IFN) types I–III and inflammatory cytokines, combined with cell line-specific mRNA expression of transforming growth factor (TGF)-β1 and interleukin (IL)-10. When comparing the two RVFV variants, we found that infection with RVFV lacking NSs function caused a hyper-IFN response and inflammatory response, while the wild-type RVFV suppressed the IFN I and inflammatory response. The induction of certain cytokines by RVFV infection could potentially lead to teratogenic effects that disrupt foetal and placental developmental pathways, leading to birth defects and other pregnancy complications, such as miscarriage.

Highlights

  • Rift Valley fever (RVF) is one of the prioritised diseases that since 2018 has been listed by the World Health Organization for urgent research and development of counteraction [1]

  • The placental chorionic villi are in direct contact with the maternal blood, and are covered with villous trophoblast cells that comprise more than 80% of all placental cells

  • Because the villous trophoblast is the principal placental cell type, which secretes a huge variety of proteins and signal substances regulating and ensuring pregnancy success, we focused our studies on two trophoblast cell lines, A3 and Jar, representing normal and transformed human villous trophoblast respectively

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Summary

Introduction

Rift Valley fever (RVF) is one of the prioritised diseases that since 2018 has been listed by the World Health Organization for urgent research and development of counteraction [1]. The function of the human haemochorial placenta is associated exclusively with villous trophoblasts These cells are important for hormonal regulation during pregnancy, providing nutritional and oxygen support to the foetus, and secretion of various cytokines and immunoregulatory factors, which can alter the maternal immune responses in healthy or pathological pregnancy [24,25]. Cytokine profiling in mouse bone-marrow-derived macrophages after infection with wt RVFV, or attenuated strains has been described [32] Together, these findings highlight the importance of the role of the RVFV NSs protein for regulating the host response to RVFV infection in different species and cell types. We characterised the infection capabilities and cytokine response in two different human trophoblast cell lines (A3 and Jar) by infecting them with different RVFV strains, either the wild-type (wt) strain or NSs-deleted recombinant RVFV

Materials and Methods
RVFV Strains
Measurement of RVFV Gn Protein Expression
Total Analysis
Statistical Analysis
Experimental Setup
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