Litcius/Paper detail

Mixed cytomegalovirus genotypes in HIV-positive mothers show compartmentalization and distinct patterns of transmission to infants

Juanita Pang, Jennifer A. Slyker, Sunando Roy, Josephine M. Bryant, Claire Atkinson, Juliana Cudini, Carey Farquhar, Paul Griffiths, James Kiarie, Sofia Morfopoulou, Alison C. Roxby, Helena Tutil, Rachel Williams, Soren Gantt, Richard A. Goldstein, Judith Breuer

2020eLife23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Cytomegalovirus (CMV) is the commonest cause of congenital infection and particularly so among infants born to HIV-infected women. Studies of congenital CMV infection (cCMVi) pathogenesis are complicated by the presence of multiple infecting maternal CMV strains, especially in HIV-positive women, and the large, recombinant CMV genome. Using newly developed tools to reconstruct CMV haplotypes, we demonstrate anatomic CMV compartmentalization in five HIV-infected mothers and identify the possibility of congenitally transmitted genotypes in three of their infants. A single CMV strain was transmitted in each congenitally infected case, and all were closely related to those that predominate in the cognate maternal cervix. Compared to non-transmitted strains, these congenitally transmitted CMV strains showed statistically significant similarities in 19 genes associated with tissue tropism and immunomodulation. In all infants, incident superinfections with distinct strains from breast milk were captured during follow-up. The results represent potentially important new insights into the virologic determinants of early CMV infection.

Topics & Concepts

CytomegalovirusBiologyGenotypeVirologyTropismHuman cytomegalovirusImmunologyTransmission (telecommunications)Breast milkTransplacentalPathogenesisTissue tropismHaplotypePlacentaGenePregnancyHuman immunodeficiency virus (HIV)Viral diseaseGeneticsVirusHerpesviridaeFetusElectrical engineeringEngineeringBiochemistryCytomegalovirus and herpesvirus researchParvovirus B19 Infection StudiesHerpesvirus Infections and Treatments