Browsing by Author "Sadovsky, Yoel"
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Item Open Access A three-dimensional culture system recapitulates placental syncytiotrophoblast development and microbial resistance.(Science advances, 2016-03-04) McConkey, Cameron A; Delorme-Axford, Elizabeth; Nickerson, Cheryl A; Kim, Kwang Sik; Sadovsky, Yoel; Boyle, Jon P; Coyne, Carolyn BIn eutherians, the placenta acts as a barrier and conduit at the maternal-fetal interface. Syncytiotrophoblasts, the multinucleated cells that cover the placental villous tree surfaces of the human placenta, are directly bathed in maternal blood and are formed by the fusion of progenitor cytotrophoblasts that underlie them. Despite their crucial role in fetal protection, many of the events that govern trophoblast fusion and protection from microbial infection are unknown. We describe a three-dimensional (3D)-based culture model using human JEG-3 trophoblast cells that develop syncytiotrophoblast phenotypes when cocultured with human microvascular endothelial cells. JEG-3 cells cultured in this system exhibit enhanced fusogenic activity and morphological and secretory activities strikingly similar to those of primary human syncytiotrophoblasts. RNASeq analyses extend the observed functional similarities to the transcriptome, where we observed significant overlap between syncytiotrophoblast-specific genes and 3D JEG-3 cultures. Furthermore, JEG-3 cells cultured in 3D are resistant to infection by viruses and Toxoplasma gondii, which mimics the high resistance of syncytiotrophoblasts to microbial infections in vivo. Given that this system is genetically manipulatable, it provides a new platform to dissect the mechanisms involved in syncytiotrophoblast development and microbial resistance.Item Open Access ADAP2 Is an Interferon Stimulated Gene That Restricts RNA Virus Entry.(PLoS pathogens, 2015-09-15) Shu, Qian; Lennemann, Nicholas J; Sarkar, Saumendra N; Sadovsky, Yoel; Coyne, Carolyn BInterferon stimulated genes (ISGs) target viruses at various stages of their infectious life cycles, including at the earliest stage of viral entry. Here we identify ArfGAP with dual pleckstrin homology (PH) domains 2 (ADAP2) as a gene upregulated by type I IFN treatment in a STAT1-dependent manner. ADAP2 functions as a GTPase-activating protein (GAP) for Arf6 and binds to phosphatidylinositol 3,4,5-trisphosphate (PI(3,4,5)P3) and PI(3,4)P2. We show that overexpression of ADAP2 suppresses dengue virus (DENV) and vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) infection in an Arf6 GAP activity-dependent manner, while exerting no effect on coxsackievirus B (CVB) or Sendai virus (SeV) replication. We further show that ADAP2 expression induces macropinocytosis and that ADAP2 strongly associates with actin-enriched membrane ruffles and with Rab8a- and LAMP1-, but not EEA1- or Rab7-, positive vesicles. Utilizing two techniques--light-sensitive neutral red (NR)-containing DENV and fluorescence assays for virus internalization--we show that ADAP2 primarily restricts DENV infection at the stage of virion entry and/or intracellular trafficking and that incoming DENV and VSV particles associate with ADAP2 during their entry. Taken together, this study identifies ADAP2 as an ISG that exerts antiviral effects against RNA viruses by altering Arf6-mediated trafficking to disrupt viral entry.Item Open Access Chromosome 19 microRNAs exert antiviral activity independent from type III interferon signaling.(Placenta, 2018-01) Bayer, Avraham; Lennemann, Nicholas J; Ouyang, Yingshi; Sadovsky, Elena; Sheridan, Megan A; Roberts, R Michael; Coyne, Carolyn B; Sadovsky, YoelINTRODUCTION:Cultured primary human trophoblasts (PHT), derived from term placentas, are relatively resistant to infection by diverse viruses. The resistance can be conferred to non-trophoblastic cells by pre-exposing them to medium that was conditioned by PHT cells. This antiviral effect is mediated, at least in part, by microRNAs (miRNA) expressed from the chromosome 19 microRNA cluster (C19MC). Recently we showed that PHT cells and cells pre-exposed to PHT medium are also resistant to infection by Zika virus (ZIKV), an effect mediated by the constitutive release of the type III interferons (IFN) IFN lambda-1 and IFN lambda-2 in trophoblastic medium. We hypothesized that trophoblastic C19MC miRNA are active against ZIKV, and assessed the interaction of this pathway with IFN lambda-1 - mediated resistance. METHODS:Term PHT cells were cultured using standard techniques. An osteosarcoma cell line (U2OS) was used as non-trophoblastic cells, which were infected with either ZIKV or vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV). Trophoblastic extracellular vesicles (EVs) were produced by gradient ultracentrifugation. RT-qPCR was used to determine viral infection, cellular or medium miRNA levels and the expression of interferon-stimulated genes. RESULTS:We showed that C19MC miRNA attenuate infection of U2OS cells by ZIKV, and that C19MC miRNA or exosomes that contain C19MC miRNA did not influence the type III IFN pathway. Similarly, cell exposure to recombinant IFN lambda-1 had no effect on miRNA expression, and these pathways did not exhibit synergistic interaction. DISCUSSION:PHT cells exert antiviral activity by at least two independent mechanisms, mediated by C19MC miRNA and by type III IFNs.