Zika virus affects eye development of infant

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The Zika virus is caused by the bite of an infected mosquito, it can also be passed through sexual contact, blood transfusions, organ transplants and during pregnancy

With a continuous study on Zika virus, the researchers from the University of California found various new facts about the cause and effects of the virus to an infant.

The Zika virus is caused by the bite of an infected mosquito from the Aedes genus. It can also be passed through sexual contact, blood transfusions, organ transplants and during pregnancy. The virus has been documented to cause a range of birth defects, including microcephaly and various neurological, musculoskeletal, and eye abnormalities. A new study from Glenn Yiu, associate professor in the Department of Ophthalmology, and Koen Van Rompay, a core scientist at the California National Primate Research Center, found that Zika infection during the first trimester of pregnancy can impact fetal retinal development and cause congenital ocular anomalies. The virus does not appear to affect ocular growth postnatally, however.

Yiu said, “It has been known that congenital infection with the Zika virus can lead to eye defects, but it was unclear if the virus continues to replicate or affect eye development after birth.” The study in rhesus monkeys suggests that the virus primarily affects fetal development during pregnancy, but not the growth of eye after birth.

Zika virus affects eye development of infant
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In this collaboration between the UC Davis Eye Center and the California National Primate Research Center, two pregnant rhesus monkeys were infected with Zika virus late in the first trimester. The ocular development of the Zika-exposed infants was then studied for two years following their birth.

The Zika-exposed infant monkeys did not display microcephaly or apparent neurological or behavioural deficits. However, the infants did exhibit several ocular birth defects. The defects included large colobomas, a missing gap in the eye due to abnormal development. The Zika exposed infant monkeys also exhibited a loss of photoreceptors -‘ the light-sensing cells of the retina’ and retinal ganglion neuron, which helps transmit visual information to the brain.

The findings were published in JCI Insight, an open-access peer-reviewed journal dedicated to biomedical research and stated that despite congenital ocular malformations at birth, their eyes appeared to follow normal development during their first two years.

The findings suggest that ocular defects due to Zika infection primarily occur in the uterus and likely do not have a continued impact on ocular development after birth.

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Rhesus macaques are natural hosts of the virus and share similar immune and ocular characteristics to humans, including blood-retinal barrier characteristics and the unique presence of a macula, making them superior animal models of the infection than typical laboratory animals like mice and rats.