Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) is the leading cause of congenital viral infection, with an incidence in the United States of approximately 1% to 3% of live births.
1Congenital Cytomegalovirus Infection.
Primary maternal HCMV infection during gestation poses a 40% to 50% risk of intrauterine transmission, whereas recurrent infection in seropositive mothers rarely causes disease.
2- Fowler K.B.
- Stagno S.
- Pass R.F.
Maternal immunity and prevention of congenital cytomegalovirus infection.
, 3- Ross S.A.
- Arora N.
- Novak Z.
- Fowler K.B.
- Britt W.J.
- Boppana S.B.
Cytomegalovirus reinfections in healthy seroimmune women.
Symptomatic infants (25%) have intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR) and permanent birth defects, including neurological deficiencies, retinopathy, and sensorineuronal deafness.
4Congenital cytomegalovirus infection and disease.
, 5- Rivera L.B.
- Boppana S.B.
- Fowler K.B.
- Britt W.J.
- Stagno S.
- Pass R.F.
Predictors of hearing loss in children with symptomatic congenital cytomegalovirus infection.
, 6- Pass R.F.
- Stagno S.
- Myers G.J.
- Alford C.A.
Outcome of symptomatic congenital cytomegalovirus infection: results of long-term longitudinal follow-up.
Congenital disease is more severe when primary maternal infection occurs in the first trimester.
7- Stagno S.
- Pass R.F.
- Cloud G.
- Britt W.J.
- Henderson R.E.
- Walton P.D.
- Veren D.A.
- Page F.
- Alford C.A.
Primary cytomegalovirus infection in pregnancy: incidence, transmission to fetus, and clinical outcome.
IUGR and spontaneous abortion in the absence of fetal HCMV infection can result from placental pathology.
8- Benirschke K.
- Kaufmann P.
Pathology of the Human Placenta.
, 9- Griffiths P.D.
- Baboonian C.
A prospective study of primary cytomegalovirus infection during pregnancy: final report.
, 10- Benirschke K.
- Mendoza G.R.
- Bazeley P.L.
Placental and fetal manifestations of cytomegalovirus infection.
Placentas infected in early gestation show long-standing damage and fibrosis at the uterine-placental interface, which impairs critical functions and results in a hypoxic intrauterine environment.
10- Benirschke K.
- Mendoza G.R.
- Bazeley P.L.
Placental and fetal manifestations of cytomegalovirus infection.
, 11Viral placentitis in congenital cytomegalovirus infection.
, 12- Garcia A.G.
- Fonseca E.F.
- Marques R.L.
- Lobato Y.Y.
Placental morphology in cytomegalovirus infection.
, 13- La Torre R.
- Nigro G.
- Mazzocco M.
- Best A.M.
- Adler S.P.
Placental enlargement in women with primary maternal cytomegalovirus infection is associated with fetal and neonatal disease.
, 14- Maidji E.
- Nigro G.
- Tabata T.
- McDonagh S.
- Nozawa N.
- Shiboski S.
- Muci S.
- Anceschi M.M.
- Aziz N.
- Adler S.P.
- Pereira L.
Antibody treatment promotes compensation for human cytomegalovirus-induced pathogenesis and a hypoxia-like condition in placentas with congenital infection.
, 15- Rana S.
- Venkatesha S.
- DePaepe M.
- Chien E.K.
- Paglia M.
- Karumanchi S.A.
Cyomegalovirus-induced mirror syndrome associated with elevated levels of circulating antiangiogenic factors.
Despite the prevalence and the medical and societal impact of congenital HCMV infection, the mechanisms of virus replication, pathogenesis, and transplacental transmission are still unresolved because of the complex nature of placental development and extreme species specificity of HCMV, which replicates only in human tissues.
Differentiating/invading cytotrophoblasts switch to an endothelial phenotype in a process that is similar to vasculogenesis.
16Trophoblast pseudo-vasculogenesis: faking it with endothelial adhesion receptors.
The cells up-regulate novel adhesion molecules and proteinases that enable their attachment to and invasion of the uterus. Interstitial invasion requires down-regulation of integrins characteristic of epithelial cells and novel expression of the integrins α1β1, α5β1, and αvβ3.
17- Damsky C.H.
- Librach C.
- Lim K.H.
- Fitzgerald M.L.
- McMaster M.T.
- Janatpour M.
- Zhou Y.
- Logan S.K.
- Fisher S.J.
Integrin switching regulates normal trophoblast invasion.
Endovascular cytotrophoblasts that remodel uterine blood vessels transform their adhesion receptor phenotype to resemble that of endothelial cells, expressing vascular-endothelial cadherin, platelet-endothelial adhesion molecule-1, and vascular endothelial adhesion molecule-1.
16Trophoblast pseudo-vasculogenesis: faking it with endothelial adhesion receptors.
, 18- Zhou Y.
- Fisher S.J.
- Janatpour M.
- Genbacev O.
- Dejana E.
- Wheelock M.
- Damsky C.H.
Human cytotrophoblasts adopt a vascular phenotype as they differentiate: a strategy for successful endovascular invasion?.
Like endothelial cells, cytotrophoblasts express substances that influence vasculogenesis and angiogenesis, including the vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) family ligands VEGF-A and VEGF-C and receptors VEGFR-1 [fms-like tyrosine kinase 1 (Flt-1)] and VEGFR-3.
19- Zhou Y.
- McMaster M.
- Woo K.
- Janatpour M.
- Perry J.
- Karpanen T.
- Alitalo K.
- Damsky C.
- Fisher S.J.
Vascular endothelial growth factor ligands and receptors that regulate human cytotrophoblast survival are dysregulated in severe preeclampsia and hemolysis, elevated liver enzymes, and low platelets syndrome.
, 20- Zhou Y.
- Bellingard V.
- Feng K.T.
- McMaster M.
- Fisher S.J.
Human cytotrophoblasts promote endothelial survival and vascular remodeling through secretion of Ang2, PlGF, and VEGF-C.
, 21- Red-Horse K.
- Rivera J.
- Schanz A.
- Zhou Y.
- Winn V.
- Kapidzic M.
- Maltepe E.
- Okazaki K.
- Kochman R.
- Vo K.C.
- Giudice L.
- Erlebacher A.
- McCune J.M.
- Stoddart C.A.
- Fisher S.J.
Cytotrophoblast induction of arterial apoptosis and lymphangiogenesis in an in vivo model of human placentation.
Expression of these molecules changes as the cells differentiate/invade, and they regulate cytotrophoblast survival in the remodeled uterine vasculature. Finally, as hemiallogeneic embryonic/fetal cells, invasive cytotrophoblasts must avoid maternal immune responses. Their expression of the nonclassical major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I molecules HLA-G
22- Kovats S.
- Main E.K.
- Librach C.
- Stubblebine M.
- Fisher S.J.
- DeMars R.
A class I antigen, HLA-G, expressed in human trophoblasts.
, 23- McMaster M.T.
- Librach C.L.
- Zhou Y.
- Lim K.H.
- Janatpour M.J.
- DeMars R.
- Kovats S.
- Damsky C.
- Fisher S.J.
Human placental HLA-G expression is restricted to differentiated cytotrophoblasts.
and HLA-C, which have limited polymorphisms,
24- Hiby S.E.
- Walker J.J.
- O'Shaughnessy K.M.
- Redman C.W.
- Carrington M.
- Trowsdale J.
- Moffett A.
Combinations of maternal KIR and fetal HLA-C genes influence the risk of preeclampsia and reproductive success.
, 25- Hiby S.E.
- Apps R.
- Sharkey A.M.
- Farrell L.E.
- Gardner L.
- Mulder A.
- Claas F.H.
- Walker J.J.
- Redman C.W.
- Morgan L.
- Tower C.
- Regan L.
- Moore G.E.
- Carrington M.
- Moffett A.
Maternal activating KIRs protect against human reproductive failure mediated by fetal HLA-C2.
contributes to their lack of immunogenicity.
Previous studies led to a rudimentary understanding of HCMV infection of the human placenta and identified several molecular mechanisms that impair functions of differentiating/invading cytotrophoblasts. HCMV infection dysregulates the expression of key integrins required for cell invasiveness,
26- Fisher S.
- Genbacev O.
- Maidji E.
- Pereira L.
Human cytomegalovirus infection of placental cytotrophoblasts in vitro and in utero: implications for transmission and pathogenesis.
, 27- Yamamoto-Tabata T.
- McDonagh S.
- Chang H.T.
- Fisher S.
- Pereira L.
Human cytomegalovirus interleukin-10 downregulates metalloproteinase activity and impairs endothelial cell migration and placental cytotrophoblast invasiveness in vitro.
reduces the expression of matrix metalloproteinase-9,
27- Yamamoto-Tabata T.
- McDonagh S.
- Chang H.T.
- Fisher S.
- Pereira L.
Human cytomegalovirus interleukin-10 downregulates metalloproteinase activity and impairs endothelial cell migration and placental cytotrophoblast invasiveness in vitro.
and down-regulates cell-cell and cell-matrix adhesion molecules,
28- Tabata T.
- McDonagh S.
- Kawakatsu H.
- Pereira L.
Cytotrophoblasts infected with a pathogenic human cytomegalovirus strain dysregulate cell-matrix and cell-cell adhesion molecules: a quantitative analysis.
including those required for pseudovasculogenesis
16Trophoblast pseudo-vasculogenesis: faking it with endothelial adhesion receptors.
and vascular remodeling.
18- Zhou Y.
- Fisher S.J.
- Janatpour M.
- Genbacev O.
- Dejana E.
- Wheelock M.
- Damsky C.H.
Human cytotrophoblasts adopt a vascular phenotype as they differentiate: a strategy for successful endovascular invasion?.
The immunosuppressive viral cytokine cmv IL-10 further reduces cytotrophoblast invasion through paracrine effects that increase IL-10 expression.
27- Yamamoto-Tabata T.
- McDonagh S.
- Chang H.T.
- Fisher S.
- Pereira L.
Human cytomegalovirus interleukin-10 downregulates metalloproteinase activity and impairs endothelial cell migration and placental cytotrophoblast invasiveness in vitro.
, 28- Tabata T.
- McDonagh S.
- Kawakatsu H.
- Pereira L.
Cytotrophoblasts infected with a pathogenic human cytomegalovirus strain dysregulate cell-matrix and cell-cell adhesion molecules: a quantitative analysis.
Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ activation by infection also compromises cytotrophoblast functions.
29- Rauwel B.
- Mariamé B.
- Martin H.
- Nielsen R.
- Allart S.
- Pipy B.
- Mandrup S.
- Devignes M.D.
- Evain-Brion D.
- Fournier T.
- Davrinche C.
Activation of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma by human cytomegalovirus for de novo replication impairs migration and invasiveness of cytotrophoblasts from early placentas.
, 30- Fournier T.
- Guibourdenche J.
- Handschuh K.
- Tsatsaris V.
- Rauwel B.
- Davrinche C.
- Evain-Brion D.
PPARγ and human trophoblast differentiation.
In chorionic villi, the neonatal Fc receptor for IgG, expressed in syncytiotrophoblasts that contact maternal blood, transcytoses circulating maternal antibodies.
31- Simister N.E.
- Story C.M.
- Chen H.L.
- Hunt J.S.
An IgG-transporting Fc receptor expressed in the syncytiotrophoblast of human placenta.
, 32Human placental Fc receptors and the transmission of antibodies from mother to fetus.
, 33- Maidji E.
- McDonagh S.
- Genbacev O.
- Tabata T.
- Pereira L.
Maternal antibodies enhance or prevent cytomegalovirus infection in the placenta by neonatal fc receptor-mediated transcytosis.
In conjunction with neutralizing titers, developmental expression of HCMV receptors, EGFR, and integrins
34- Feire A.L.
- Roy R.M.
- Manley K.
- Compton T.
The glycoprotein B disintegrin-like domain binds beta 1 integrin to mediate cytomegalovirus entry.
, 35- Feire A.L.
- Koss H.
- Compton T.
Cellular integrins function as entry receptors for human cytomegalovirus via a highly conserved disintegrin-like domain.
, 36- Wang X.
- Huong S.M.
- Chiu M.L.
- Raab-Traub N.
- Huang E.S.
Epidermal growth factor receptor is a cellular receptor for human cytomegalovirus.
, 37- Wang X.
- Huang D.Y.
- Huong S.M.
- Huang E.S.
Integrin αvβ3 is a coreceptor for human cytomegalovirus.
determines susceptibility to infection.
33- Maidji E.
- McDonagh S.
- Genbacev O.
- Tabata T.
- Pereira L.
Maternal antibodies enhance or prevent cytomegalovirus infection in the placenta by neonatal fc receptor-mediated transcytosis.
, 38- McDonagh S.
- Maidji E.
- Ma W.
- Chang H.T.
- Fisher S.
- Pereira L.
Viral and bacterial pathogens at the maternal-fetal interface.
, 39- Pereira L.
- Maidji E.
- McDonagh S.
- Genbacev O.
- Fisher S.
Human cytomegalovirus transmission from the uterus to the placenta correlates with the presence of pathogenic bacteria and maternal immunity.
, 40- Nozawa N.
- Fang-Hoover J.
- Tabata T.
- Maidji E.
- Pereira L.
Cytomegalovirus-specific, high-avidity IgG with neutralizing activity in maternal circulation enriched in the fetal bloodstream.
HCMV infects spatially distinct populations of cytotrophoblasts that express α1β1 and αvβ3 integrins used as surface receptors.
41- Maidji E.
- Genbacev O.
- Chang H.T.
- Pereira L.
Developmental regulation of human cytomegalovirus receptors in cytotrophoblasts correlates with distinct replication sites in the placenta.
How HCMV disseminates to the placenta and the early stages of pathogenesis in pregnancy are still unresolved because of the virus' extreme host range restriction. A successful approach to overcome the obstacle to studies of HCMV
in vivo has been to infect SCID mice (ie, mice with severe combined immunodeficiency) that have received xenografts of human tissues. Infection of human fetal thymus/liver under the mouse kidney capsule showed that medullary epithelial cells are prominent targets of HCMV replication.
42- Mocarski E.S.
- Bonyhadi M.
- Salimi S.
- McCune J.M.
- Kaneshima H.
Human cytomegalovirus in a SCID-hu mouse: thymic epithelial cells are prominent targets of viral replication.
Thus, dramatic interstrain differences were evident in replication of low-passage clinical isolates and laboratory strains in thymus/liver xenografts
in vivo.
42- Mocarski E.S.
- Bonyhadi M.
- Salimi S.
- McCune J.M.
- Kaneshima H.
Human cytomegalovirus in a SCID-hu mouse: thymic epithelial cells are prominent targets of viral replication.
, 43- Brown J.M.
- Kaneshima H.
- Mocarski E.S.
Dramatic interstrain differences in the replication of human cytomegalovirus in SCID-hu mice.
The strain Toledo replicates to high titers in implants, whereas the laboratory strains AD169 and Towne, serially passaged in fibroblasts, are attenuated and fail to propagate in tissues
in vivo.
43- Brown J.M.
- Kaneshima H.
- Mocarski E.S.
Dramatic interstrain differences in the replication of human cytomegalovirus in SCID-hu mice.
AD169 lacks a 15-kb segment of viral genome that encodes at least 19 open reading frames present in the genomes of all pathogenic clinical strains.
44- Cha T.A.
- Tom E.
- Kemble G.W.
- Duke G.M.
- Mocarski E.S.
- Spaete R.R.
Human cytomegalovirus clinical isolates carry at least 19 genes not found in laboratory strains.
A deletion mutant of Toledo lacking these sequences, although exhibiting only a minor growth defect in fibroblasts, fails to replicate in thymus/liver implants in SCID mice, evidence that genes in this region are central to infection
in vivo.
45- Wang W.
- Taylor S.L.
- Leisenfelder S.A.
- Morton R.
- Moffat J.F.
- Smirnov S.
- Zhu H.
Human cytomegalovirus genes in the 15-kilobase region are required for viral replication in implanted human tissues in SCID mice.
HCMV replication in endothelial and epithelial cells correlates with determinants specified by ORFs UL128-131A,
46Human cytomegalovirus virion protein complex required for epithelial and endothelial cell tropism.
, 47- Schuessler A.
- Sampaio K.L.
- Straschewski S.
- Sinzger C.
Mutational mapping of pUL131A of human cytomegalovirus emphasizes its central role for endothelial cell tropism.
which are highly conserved in clinical isolates
48- Baldanti F.
- Paolucci S.
- Campanini G.
- Sarasini A.
- Percivalle E.
- Revello M.G.
- Gerna G.
Human cytomegalovirus UL131A, UL130 and UL128 genes are highly conserved among field isolates.
and which elicit neutralizing antibodies in humans.
49- Gerna G.
- Sarasini A.
- Patrone M.
- Percivalle E.
- Fiorina L.
- Campanini G.
- Gallina A.
- Baldanti F.
- Revello M.G.
Human cytomegalovirus serum neutralizing antibodies block virus infection of endothelial/epithelial cells, but not fibroblasts, early during primary infection.
, 50- Macagno A.
- Bernasconi N.L.
- Vanzetta F.
- Dander E.
- Sarasini A.
- Revello M.G.
- Gerna G.
- Sallusto F.
- Lanzavecchia A.
Isolation of human monoclonal antibodies that potently neutralize human cytomegalovirus infection by targeting different epitopes on the gH/gL/UL128-131A complex.
Herein, we investigated HCMV pathogenesis in infected human placental villous explants and in xenografts maintained
in vivo. We used a model of human placentation to investigate the vascular effects of fetal cytotrophoblasts in human placental villi transplanted beneath the kidney capsules of SCID mice.
21- Red-Horse K.
- Rivera J.
- Schanz A.
- Zhou Y.
- Winn V.
- Kapidzic M.
- Maltepe E.
- Okazaki K.
- Kochman R.
- Vo K.C.
- Giudice L.
- Erlebacher A.
- McCune J.M.
- Stoddart C.A.
- Fisher S.J.
Cytotrophoblast induction of arterial apoptosis and lymphangiogenesis in an in vivo model of human placentation.
VR1814, a clinical isolate, infected cell column cytotrophoblasts in placental explants and impaired the formation of anchoring villi
in vitro. In xenografts, VR1814-infected placental cells had a severely diminished capacity to invade and form lymphatic vessels. In striking contrast, AD169 replicated poorly in villous explants. In SCID mice, AD169-infected cytotrophoblasts remodeled the resident arteries, but these were faulty. Our results show, for the first time to our knowledge, that
HCMV genes dispensable for growth in culture function as determinants of pathogenesis that could contribute to vascular anomalies that originate in early placentation.
Materials and Methods
Human Placental Villous Explants, Culture, and HCMV Infection in Vitro
Approval for this project was obtained from the Institutional Review Board at the University of California, San Francisco. Protocols involving human fetal and placental tissue from deliveries at Moffitt Hospital (San Francisco, CA) and use of animals were approved by the Committees on Human and Animal Research, respectively. Normal human placentas (
n = 3) were obtained from elective termination of pregnancy (Advanced Bioscience Resources, Alameda, CA). Procedures for preparation of organ cultures (explants) of human placental villi were reported.
26- Fisher S.
- Genbacev O.
- Maidji E.
- Pereira L.
Human cytomegalovirus infection of placental cytotrophoblasts in vitro and in utero: implications for transmission and pathogenesis.
Briefly, chorionic villi dissected from placentas at 6 to 8 weeks' gestational age were cultured on Millicell-CM inserts (0.4-μm pore size; Millipore, Billerica, MA) coated with Matrigel (BD Biosciences, Bedford, MA) in explant medium: Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium/F12 (1:1) (Gibco, Carlsbad, CA) with 10% Hyclone fetal bovine serum (FBS; Thermo Scientific, South Logan, UT), 1% penicillin-streptomycin, and 1% amino acid. After 18 to 20 hours, explants were infected [2 × 10
6 plaque-forming units (PFU) per explant] with HCMV VR1814, a clinical isolate maintained at low passage and propagated in human umbilical vein endothelial cells,
51- Revello M.G.
- Baldanti F.
- Percivalle E.
- Sarasini A.
- De-Giuli L.
- Genini E.
- Lilleri D.
- Labo N.
- Gerna G.
In vitro selection of human cytomegalovirus variants unable to transfer virus and virus products from infected cells to polymorphonuclear leukocytes and to grow in endothelial cells.
or AD169, a laboratory strain serially passaged in human foreskin fibroblasts. Explants were maintained for 3 days after infection and fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde (Wako Chemical USA, Richmond, VA) for histological analysis.
Primary Cytotrophoblast Isolation, Culture, and HCMV Infection in Vitro
Cells were isolated from second-trimester human placentas by previously described methods.
26- Fisher S.
- Genbacev O.
- Maidji E.
- Pereira L.
Human cytomegalovirus infection of placental cytotrophoblasts in vitro and in utero: implications for transmission and pathogenesis.
, 52- Librach C.L.
- Werb Z.
- Fitzgerald M.L.
- Chiu K.
- Corwin N.M.
- Esteves R.A.
- Grobelny D.
- Galardy R.
- Damsky C.H.
- Fisher S.J.
92-kD type IV collagenase mediates invasion of human cytotrophoblasts.
Briefly, placentas were subjected to a series of enzymatic digestions, which detached cytotrophoblast progenitors from the stromal cores of the chorionic villi. Cells were then purified over a Percoll gradient, cultured on substrates coated with Matrigel, and plated in serum-free medium: Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium/F12 (1:1), with 2% Nutridoma (Roche Diagnostics, Indianapolis, IN), 1% sodium pyruvate, 1% HEPES, 1% penicillin-streptomycin, and 0.1% gentamicin (UCSF Cell Culture Facility, San Francisco, CA).
26- Fisher S.
- Genbacev O.
- Maidji E.
- Pereira L.
Human cytomegalovirus infection of placental cytotrophoblasts in vitro and in utero: implications for transmission and pathogenesis.
, 52- Librach C.L.
- Werb Z.
- Fitzgerald M.L.
- Chiu K.
- Corwin N.M.
- Esteves R.A.
- Grobelny D.
- Galardy R.
- Damsky C.H.
- Fisher S.J.
92-kD type IV collagenase mediates invasion of human cytotrophoblasts.
After 16 hours, cytotrophoblasts were infected with AD169 or VR1814 at a multiplicity of infection of 2 and maintained for 3 days.
27- Yamamoto-Tabata T.
- McDonagh S.
- Chang H.T.
- Fisher S.
- Pereira L.
Human cytomegalovirus interleukin-10 downregulates metalloproteinase activity and impairs endothelial cell migration and placental cytotrophoblast invasiveness in vitro.
In Vivo Transplantation of Human Placental Villi and HCMV Infection in SCID Mice
Homozygous C.B-17
scid/scid mice (Taconic, Germantown, NY) were the recipients of human chorionic villi (placentas at 8 to 10 weeks' gestation).
In toto, chorionic villi dissected from five first-trimester placentas were transplanted to 65 SCID mice. To determine the optimal time point for HCMV infection, based on recovery of infectious progeny, placental villi were infected immediately before transplantation (
n = 30 mice) or after 3 weeks
in vivo (
n = 22 mice). Mock-infected controls (
n = 6 mice) were maintained
in vivo for the intervals determined by the experimental conditions, and titration indicated the controls were virus free. Dissected placental villi were washed with serum-free medium, infected with VR1814 (1 × 10
6 PFU) for 1 hour, transplanted under the kidney capsular membrane using surgical methods, and maintained for 3 weeks after infection
in vivo.
21- Red-Horse K.
- Rivera J.
- Schanz A.
- Zhou Y.
- Winn V.
- Kapidzic M.
- Maltepe E.
- Okazaki K.
- Kochman R.
- Vo K.C.
- Giudice L.
- Erlebacher A.
- McCune J.M.
- Stoddart C.A.
- Fisher S.J.
Cytotrophoblast induction of arterial apoptosis and lymphangiogenesis in an in vivo model of human placentation.
, 53- McCune J.M.
- Namikawa R.
- Kaneshima H.
- Shultz L.D.
- Lieberman M.
- Weissman I.L.
The SCID-hu mouse: murine model for the analysis of human hematolymphoid differentiation and function.
Alternatively, placental villi were first transplanted and maintained
in vivo for 4 weeks. At that time, implants were surgically exposed, injected with virus (100 μL, 1 × 10
6 PFU), and maintained
in vivo an additional 3 weeks. To study the capacity of virulent and attenuated HCMV strains to grow
in vivo, placental villi were cultured for 18 to 20 hours on Matrigel, infected with VR1814 or AD169 (2 × 10
6 PFU), transplanted into SCID mice (
n = 32 mice), and maintained for 3 weeks. Virus titers used to infect villous explants and xenografts were determined empirically (data not shown). Mock-infected control placental villi were virus free. Mice were housed under pathogen-free conditions and sacrificed, and kidneys with implants were recovered. One half of the kidney implant was immediately fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde at 4°C for histological analysis, and the other half was snap frozen and stored at −80°C for titration of progeny.
HCMV Titration in Placental Villous Implants in Vivo Maintained in SCID Mice
Frozen implants were sonicated in 0.5 mL cold Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium containing 1% FBS on ice. Virus titers were determined by serial dilution of tissue homogenates, followed by rapid infectivity assays on human foreskin fibroblast monolayers in duplicate.
26- Fisher S.
- Genbacev O.
- Maidji E.
- Pereira L.
Human cytomegalovirus infection of placental cytotrophoblasts in vitro and in utero: implications for transmission and pathogenesis.
Virus titers were expressed as log
10 PFU/g protein of tissue homogenates.
Immunohistochemistry
Placental villous explants cultured on Matrigel
in vitro and implants from SCID mice were fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde for 30 minutes and 3 to 6 hours, respectively, followed by sucrose gradients and embedded in gelatin or optimal cutting temperature compound, respectively. Decidual and placental biopsy specimens were also fixed and embedded in optimal cutting temperature compound. The tissues were frozen in dry ice and cut into sections (5 μm thick). For double immunostaining, tissue sections were simultaneously incubated with primary antibodies from various species and detected with fluorescein isothiocyanate– or tetramethyl rhodamine isothiocyanate–conjugated secondary antibodies (Jackson ImmunoResearch, West Grove, PA). Nuclei were counterstained with DAPI (Vector Laboratories, Burlingame, CA). Mouse monoclonal antibodies to HCMV immediate-early (IE 1&2) nuclear proteins (CH160) and glycoprotein B (gB) were produced in the Pereira Lab.
54Monoclonal Antibody Production.
, 55- Pereira L.
- Hoffman M.
- Tatsuno M.
- Dondero D.
Polymorphism of human cytomegalovirus glycoproteins characterized by monoclonal antibodies.
Rat monoclonal anti-human cytokeratin (clone 7D3) was a generous gift from Dr. Susan Fisher (University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA). Mouse monoclonal anti-human HLA-G (clone 4H84) was a gift from Dr. Michael McMaster (University of California, San Francisco).
23- McMaster M.T.
- Librach C.L.
- Zhou Y.
- Lim K.H.
- Janatpour M.J.
- DeMars R.
- Kovats S.
- Damsky C.
- Fisher S.J.
Human placental HLA-G expression is restricted to differentiated cytotrophoblasts.
Rabbit polyclonal anti-integrin α9β1 was a generous gift from Dr. Dean Sheppard (University of California, San Francisco).
56- Chen C.
- Kudo M.
- Rutaganira F.
- Takano H.
- Lee C.
- Atakilit A.
- Robinett K.S.
- Uede T.
- Wolters P.
- Shokat K.
- Huang X.
- Sheppard D.
Integrin α9β1 in airway smooth muscle suppresses exaggerated airway narrowing.
Guinea pig anti-HCMV gB was a gift from Chiron Corporation (Emeryville, CA). The following antibodies were obtained from the companies listed: rabbit monoclonal anti-human/mouse Ki-67 (clone EPR3611; Abcam, Cambridge, MA), mouse monoclonal anti-human cytokeratin 7 (clone OV-TL 12/30; Dako, Carpentaria, CA), rabbit polyclonal anti-mouse lymphatic vessel endothelial hyaluronan receptor (LYVE-1; Fitzgerald Industries International, North Acton, MA), rabbit polyclonal anti-human VEGF-A (A-20) and rabbit polyclonal anti-ephrin B2 (P-20) (Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Santa Cruz, CA), goat polyclonal anti-human VEGF-C and goat polyclonal anti-carcinoembryonic antigen-related cell adhesion molecule 1 (CEACAM1)/CD66a (R&D Systems, Minneapolis, MN), rat monoclonal anti-mouse CD31 (clone MEC13.3; BD Pharmingen, San Diego, CA), and Syrian hamster monoclonal anti-mouse podoplanin (Abcam). Apoptosis was detected by TUNEL using the
In Situ Cell Death Detection Kit, Fluorescein (Roche Applied Science, Indianapolis, IN).
Measurements of Anchoring Villi Formed in Placental Explants in Vitro
Sizes of anchoring villi formed in uninfected controls and HCMV-infected explants at 3 days after infection were quantified by measuring the areas of explant outgrowths from anchoring villi visible in digital photographs. Explants were photographed by phase-contrast microscopy on a Nikon Eclipse TE2000-S microscope (Nikon Instruments, Melville, NY) equipped with a Kodak DC215 digital camera (Eastman Kodak, Rochester, NY) using a ×4 objective (×40 total magnification). All digital images were of the same magnification, dimensions, and pixel densities. Areas were measured by importing images into Adobe Photoshop CS5.1 (Adobe Systems Inc., San Jose, CA), outlining the visible areas of outgrowth from the villi with the lasso tool, and recording the number of pixels within the outlined areas from the histogram function (at cache level 1). Numbers of villi examined are as follows: mock-infected, n = 25; AD169, n = 21; and VR1814, n = 43.
Quantification of Cytotrophoblast Interstitial Invasion into Renal Parenchyma
A total of 15 to 30 sections were prepared from each placental villous implant in kidneys of SCID mice. Two centrally located sections were stained with H&E. For each implant, one entire H&E-stained section was digitally photographed by light microscopy using a ×4 objective lens (×40 total magnification) on a Nikon Eclipse 50i microscope equipped with a SPOT 7.4 Slider camera (Diagnostic Instruments, Sterling Heights, MI). A total of 10 to 20 adjacent images of an entire section were imported into Adobe Photoshop CS5.1 and merged using the automated photomerge function to generate an image of an entire implant in the kidney parenchyma. The degree of implant invasion (ie, cytotrophoblast-occupied kidney parenchyma) was measured by outlining implants with the lasso tool and recording the number of pixels outlined (at cache level 1). The total implant area, including the portion external to the kidney surface proper, was measured directly by outlining. The area of cytotrophoblast-occupied kidney parenchyma was determined by subtracting the external portion from the total area of the implant. Placental villous implants were defined in H&E-stained sections by their morphological characteristics, which are distinct from those of the kidney parenchyma. Adjacent sections were immunostained for cytokeratin to confirm the degree of invasion, including small clusters and individual cytotrophoblasts that projected deeper into the parenchyma than the main invasion front.
Quantification of Blood Vessel Sizes
To determine the relative sizes of remodeled blood vessels within implants, H&E-stained sections were photographed at ×40 magnification, and images were analyzed using Photoshop CS5.1. For each section, the cross-sectional areas of the five largest discernible vessels (ie, those that had clearly defined walls and, in most cases, erythrocytes) were measured by outlining with the lasso tool, determining the number of pixels encircled, and converting pixel area to standard area units (mm2). Most VR1814-infected implants had few or no discernible blood vessels. Both average vessel size and total cross-sectional area of perfusion for these and other implants lacking discernible vessels were considered 0. To quantify vessel diameter, 26 vessels were measured in six AD169-infected implants. For many AD169-infected and control implants, there were no clear distinctions between large vessels; rather, they appeared to contain networks of interconnected vessels. The results are expressed as the average total cross-sectional area of the five largest discernible vessels in each section, rather than average individual vessel size, because total area more accurately represents the differences between conditions. In most cases, the five largest vessels accounted for all clearly discernible large vessels and, thus, represented a good approximation of the total vessel area within the implant.
Quantification of Lymphatic Endothelial Cell Proliferation in the Renal Parenchyma
Proliferation of mouse lymphatic endothelial cells was quantified by immunostaining with anti-Ki-67 and anti-mouse LYVE-1 antibodies. The staining images (×200 total magnification) were acquired using a Nikon Eclipse 50i microscope and further analyzed quantitatively using ImageJ software version 1.44o (NIH, Bethesda, MD) or Adobe Photoshop CS 5.1. The numbers of LYVE-1– and Ki-67–positive lymphatic endothelial cells per field were counted, and the proliferation index was expressed as a percentage of Ki-67–positive cells.
Quantification of Factors in Conditioned Media
Conditioned media from control and infected cytotrophoblasts and placental villous explants on Matrigel in vitro were collected at 1 and 3 days after infection, cleared by centrifugation, and stored at −80°C. Levels of lymphangiogenic factors and chemokines were quantified using a human VEGF-C enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) kit (Syd Labs, Malden, MA), basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF), human IL-6 Quantikine ELISA kits, and the human VEGFR3 DuoSet ELISA Development System (R&D Systems). Bioactive VEGF-A was measured using human VEGF-A BioLISA (eBioscience, San Diego, CA).
Lymphatic Endothelial Cell Proliferation Assays
Lymphatic endothelial cell proliferation was measured by MTT cell proliferation assays.
57Optimization of the Tetrazolium Dye (MTT) Colorimetric Assay for Cellular Growth and Viability.
Human lymphatic endothelial cells (HLECs) isolated from lymph nodes (ScienCell Research Laboratories, Carlsbad, CA) were plated on fibronectin-coated (1 mg/mL), 96-well plates (5 × 10
3 cells per well) in endothelial cell medium (ECM) supplemented with endothelial cell growth supplement and 5% FBS (ScienCell Research Laboratories), referred to as growth factor medium (GFM), for 3 days, and then starved for 24 hours in ECM containing 0.5% FBS (control media). Media were then replaced with 100 μL of control media, with or without recombinant human VEGF-A, VEGF-C, or bFGF proteins (R&D Systems). ECM supplemented with endothelial cell growth supplement and 5% FBS (GFM) was used as a positive control. After 72 hours' incubation, 20 μL of MTT (5 mg/mL) solution was added to each well, and the plates were further incubated for 24 hours at 37°C. The media were then removed, 100 μL of dimethyl sulfoxide was added to each well to dissolve the blue crystals, and absorbance was measured at 562 nm with a reference filter of 650 nm.
To assess the effect of conditioned media from control and infected cytotrophoblasts on lymphatic endothelial cell proliferation, conditioned media from control and infected cells on Matrigel were collected at 2 days after infection. Starved HLECs were then cultured with a mixture of 50 μL of conditioned medium and 50 μL of control medium for 72 hours, and MTT assays were performed. As a control, we used a mixture (referred to as SF-C for serum free and control) of 50 μL of serum-free medium (as used for culturing cytotrophoblasts, previously described) and 50 μL of control medium. To assess the functional contributions of particular growth factors, cells were incubated with blocking antibodies (anti-bFGF, 5 μg/mL; R&D Systems) or recombinant human Fc chimeras (VEGFR-1/Flt-1 and VEGFR-3/Flt-4, 5 μg/mL; R&D Systems) for 30 minutes before the addition of conditioned media. Pilot studies were conducted to determine effective inhibitory concentrations; concentrations >5 μg/mL did not lead to significantly greater inhibition for any of the three inhibitors. Isotype control antibodies (goat IgG, 5 μg/mL; R&D Systems) and a recombinant human CD6–Fc chimera (5 μg/mL; R&D Systems) were used as controls.
In the figures, the degree of cell proliferation is expressed as percentage of control values (from cells cultured in control media). Experiments to assess the effect of growth factors and cytotrophoblast-conditioned media were performed at least six times. Results of blocking experiments are expressed as percentage of values obtained using conditioned media without inhibitors. Blocking experiments were performed at least three times. The significance of differences was determined using the Student's t-test.
Statistical Analysis
Average outcomes were compared between groups defined by time period or treatment type using rank-based Kruskal-Wallis tests. For replicate outcomes (measured more than once per individual sample), between-group comparisons were based on linear regression models for log-transformed outcomes, with robust variances accounting for possible within-individual correlation in outcomes. To assess the possible effect of nonnormal outcome distributions on results, we repeated regression analyses assuming γ-distributed outcomes. No major differences were noted, so only the original regression results are reported.
The relationship between viral titer and percentage of infected cytotrophoblasts was determined by the Spearman rank correlation coefficient. Statistical data analysis of the lymphatic proliferation index was performed using the Pearson's χ2 test.
Box-and-whisker plots were generated in Microsoft Excel (Microsoft Inc., Redmond, WA) using standard Excel functions. All box-and-whisker plots were made by dividing data sets into four quartiles (ie, each representing 25% of the data points). The box represents the second and third quartiles, which are divided by the horizontal bar representing the median. The whiskers span the first quartile (from the second quartile box down to the minimum) and the fourth quartile (from the third quartile box up to the maximum). Any data not included between the whiskers were plotted as an outlier with a small circle. The Student's t-test was used to determine the significance of the difference in expression between control and HCMV infection. P < 0.05 was considered significant.
Institutional Approvals
Approval for this project was obtained from the Institutional Review Board at the University of California, San Francisco. Protocols involving human fetal and placental tissue from deliveries at Moffitt Hospital and use of animals were approved by the Committees on Human and Animal Research, respectively.
Discussion
Herein, we studied HCMV pathogenesis in explants of human placental villi infected by a low-passage, endotheliotropic clinical strain and a laboratory strain in a human placentation model of cytotrophoblast-induced arterial remodeling and lymphangiogenesis. By using these techniques, we showed, for the first time to our knowledge, that VR1814 replicates in cytotrophoblasts within the architecture of the human placenta and exhibits pathogenic determinants.
Table 1 summarizes HCMV pathogenesis properties identified
in vitro and
in vivo. In placental explants, VR1814 replicates in villous and cell column cytotrophoblasts that differentiate into invasive cells and populate anchoring villi. In infected placental xenografts, viral replication dramatically reduced interstitial and endovascular cytotrophoblast invasion and impaired lymphangiogenesis. In striking contrast, AD169 replicates poorly in villous cytotrophoblasts in explants and has negligible effects on the formation of anchoring villi. Likewise, AD169 replication was reduced in human placental xenografts in SCID mice, and cytotrophoblasts differentiated and invaded the kidney parenchyma. Some resident arteries were completely remodeled, whereas others were only partially remodeled. These chimeric blood vessels contained resident arterial endothelial cells, cytotrophoblasts, and lymphatic endothelial cells and were engorged and permeable to blood, suggesting functional defects. VR1814-infected explants significantly increased levels of VEGF-C and bFGF
in vitro, which could explain abnormal lymphatic endothelial cell proliferation and dysregulated lymphangiogenesis. In contrast, AD169-infected explants substantially increased the level of bioactive VEGF-A, which could promote proliferation of lymphatic endothelial cells and their incorporation into defective blood vessels. Our results suggest that HCMV replication in the placenta enhances the release of paracrine factors that dysregulate cell proliferation and migration and contributes to pathogenesis in the developing placenta.
Table 1HCMV Pathogenic Features in Infected Human Placental Villi in Vitro and in Vivo
NA, not available; ND, no data.
In congenitally infected placentas, HCMV replicates in several cell types, including uterine glandular epithelial and endothelial cells, decidual cells, and differentiating cytotrophoblasts in the maternal compartment and villous cytotrophoblasts, stromal fibroblasts, and endothelial cells in the fetal compartment.
14- Maidji E.
- Nigro G.
- Tabata T.
- McDonagh S.
- Nozawa N.
- Shiboski S.
- Muci S.
- Anceschi M.M.
- Aziz N.
- Adler S.P.
- Pereira L.
Antibody treatment promotes compensation for human cytomegalovirus-induced pathogenesis and a hypoxia-like condition in placentas with congenital infection.
, 26- Fisher S.
- Genbacev O.
- Maidji E.
- Pereira L.
Human cytomegalovirus infection of placental cytotrophoblasts in vitro and in utero: implications for transmission and pathogenesis.
, 38- McDonagh S.
- Maidji E.
- Ma W.
- Chang H.T.
- Fisher S.
- Pereira L.
Viral and bacterial pathogens at the maternal-fetal interface.
, 39- Pereira L.
- Maidji E.
- McDonagh S.
- Genbacev O.
- Fisher S.
Human cytomegalovirus transmission from the uterus to the placenta correlates with the presence of pathogenic bacteria and maternal immunity.
, 67- McDonagh S.
- Maidji E.
- Chang H.T.
- Pereira L.
Patterns of human cytomegalovirus infection in term placentas: a preliminary analysis.
Early studies with AD169 showed that the laboratory strain infects primary cytotrophoblasts and down-regulates integrin α1β1 expression, thereby reducing invasiveness
in vitro.
26- Fisher S.
- Genbacev O.
- Maidji E.
- Pereira L.
Human cytomegalovirus infection of placental cytotrophoblasts in vitro and in utero: implications for transmission and pathogenesis.
Regarding endotheliotropic clinical strains, VR1814-infected cytotrophoblasts up-regulate cmv IL-10, which decreases matrix metalloproteinase-9 activity, consequently reducing degradation of the extracellular matrix and impeding cell migration.
27- Yamamoto-Tabata T.
- McDonagh S.
- Chang H.T.
- Fisher S.
- Pereira L.
Human cytomegalovirus interleukin-10 downregulates metalloproteinase activity and impairs endothelial cell migration and placental cytotrophoblast invasiveness in vitro.
In addition, quantitative analysis showed that VR1814-infected cytotrophoblasts reduce expression of the key integrins and cell-cell adhesion molecules α1, α5, α9, and VE-cadherin, differentiation antigens whose expression is required for pseudovascularization.
18- Zhou Y.
- Fisher S.J.
- Janatpour M.
- Genbacev O.
- Dejana E.
- Wheelock M.
- Damsky C.H.
Human cytotrophoblasts adopt a vascular phenotype as they differentiate: a strategy for successful endovascular invasion?.
, 28- Tabata T.
- McDonagh S.
- Kawakatsu H.
- Pereira L.
Cytotrophoblasts infected with a pathogenic human cytomegalovirus strain dysregulate cell-matrix and cell-cell adhesion molecules: a quantitative analysis.
, 60- Zhou Y.
- Damsky C.H.
- Fisher S.J.
Preeclampsia is associated with failure of human cytotrophoblasts to mimic a vascular adhesion phenotype: one cause of defective endovascular invasion in this syndrome?.
Infection in the SCID placentation model shows, for the first time to our knowledge, that invasion defects
in vitro could affect remodeling of stromal tissue and blood vessels
in vivo. The diameter of blood vessels and the total area within VR1814-infected implants, indicators of the efficiency of perfusion, were significantly reduced compared with the controls. These results have important implications for the development of IUGR in pregnancies complicated by congenital infection. Together, reduced vascularization, inflammation, and fibrinoid deposition could decrease perfusion of the placental surface, leading to transport defects and hypoxia.
14- Maidji E.
- Nigro G.
- Tabata T.
- McDonagh S.
- Nozawa N.
- Shiboski S.
- Muci S.
- Anceschi M.M.
- Aziz N.
- Adler S.P.
- Pereira L.
Antibody treatment promotes compensation for human cytomegalovirus-induced pathogenesis and a hypoxia-like condition in placentas with congenital infection.
Surprising differences were found in the capacity of the attenuated and low-passage pathogenic strains to infect cytotrophoblasts, replicate, and progress to late infection with gB expression in intact placental villi. All HCMV strains use the conserved core proteins gB and gH/gL, which induce fusion of the virion envelope with the plasma membrane.
34- Feire A.L.
- Roy R.M.
- Manley K.
- Compton T.
The glycoprotein B disintegrin-like domain binds beta 1 integrin to mediate cytomegalovirus entry.
, 35- Feire A.L.
- Koss H.
- Compton T.
Cellular integrins function as entry receptors for human cytomegalovirus via a highly conserved disintegrin-like domain.
Pathogenic strains express additional proteins, UL128-131A, that form a pentameric complex with gH/gL, facilitating virion attachment and entry into epithelial and endothelial cells.
68Human cytomegalovirus UL131 open reading frame is required for epithelial cell tropism.
, 69- Scrivano L.
- Sinzger C.
- Nitschko H.
- Koszinowski U.H.
- Adler B.
HCMV spread and cell tropism are determined by distinct virus populations.
, 70- Adler B.
- Scrivano L.
- Ruzcics Z.
- Rupp B.
- Sinzger C.
- Koszinowski U.
Role of human cytomegalovirus UL131A in cell type-specific virus entry and release.
In the present study, we showed that AD169 was highly impaired in infection and replication in cell column cytotrophoblasts (
Figure 1, B, E, and G). In earlier studies,
33- Maidji E.
- McDonagh S.
- Genbacev O.
- Tabata T.
- Pereira L.
Maternal antibodies enhance or prevent cytomegalovirus infection in the placenta by neonatal fc receptor-mediated transcytosis.
, 41- Maidji E.
- Genbacev O.
- Chang H.T.
- Pereira L.
Developmental regulation of human cytomegalovirus receptors in cytotrophoblasts correlates with distinct replication sites in the placenta.
we showed that the strain Toledo infects villous cytotrophoblasts and differentiating/invading cells that express EGFR and integrin α1β1 or αvβ3, but not cell columns.
33- Maidji E.
- McDonagh S.
- Genbacev O.
- Tabata T.
- Pereira L.
Maternal antibodies enhance or prevent cytomegalovirus infection in the placenta by neonatal fc receptor-mediated transcytosis.
, 41- Maidji E.
- Genbacev O.
- Chang H.T.
- Pereira L.
Developmental regulation of human cytomegalovirus receptors in cytotrophoblasts correlates with distinct replication sites in the placenta.
Like clinical HCMV isolates, the strain Toledo carries additional DNA sequences that encode at least 19 genes but have rearrangements of the UL131A gene sequence.
44- Cha T.A.
- Tom E.
- Kemble G.W.
- Duke G.M.
- Mocarski E.S.
- Spaete R.R.
Human cytomegalovirus clinical isolates carry at least 19 genes not found in laboratory strains.
Cell columns bridge the gap between the placenta and the uterus and are suspended in the intervillous space by homotypic interactions. They express L-selectin and its carbohydrate ligand, part of a specialized adhesion system activated by shear stress that maintains cell column integrity during the early stages of placental development.
71- Prakobphol A.
- Genbacev O.
- Gormley M.
- Kapidzic M.
- Fisher S.J.
A role for the L-selectin adhesion system in mediating cytotrophoblast emigration from the placenta.
This type of adhesion may also facilitate cytotrophoblast movement in and exit from cell columns, a prerequisite for uterine invasion. CEACAM1 mediates homophilic and heterophilic interactions with other adhesion molecules, and its expression in invasive cytotrophoblasts (
Figure 4, B, E, H, and J–L, and
Figure 6D) suggests that CEACAM1 may also control cytotrophoblast invasion and interactions with the resident vasculature.
59- Bamberger A.M.
- Sudahl S.
- Loning T.
- Wagener C.
- Bamberger C.M.
- Drakakis P.
- Coutifaris C.
- Makrigiannakis A.
The adhesion molecule CEACAM1 (CD66a, C-CAM, BGP) is specifically expressed by the extravillous intermediate trophoblast.
Regarding the impact of HCMV infection on cell columns, virus replication could decrease the population of cytotrophoblasts capable of progressing further down the differentiation pathway, a prerequisite for interstitial and endovascular invasion. Infection could also perturb the specialized adhesive properties of cell columns, limiting the number of cytotrophoblasts that exit. Together, these events could severely reduce development of anchoring villi in VR1814-infected explants and the cytotrophoblast population capable of invading the interstitium and blood vessels in human placental xenografts.
Uterine spiral artery remodeling involves endothelial apoptosis induced by invasive cytotrophoblasts through Fas/FasL interactions.
21- Red-Horse K.
- Rivera J.
- Schanz A.
- Zhou Y.
- Winn V.
- Kapidzic M.
- Maltepe E.
- Okazaki K.
- Kochman R.
- Vo K.C.
- Giudice L.
- Erlebacher A.
- McCune J.M.
- Stoddart C.A.
- Fisher S.J.
Cytotrophoblast induction of arterial apoptosis and lymphangiogenesis in an in vivo model of human placentation.
, 72- Ashton S.V.
- Whitley G.S.
- Dash P.R.
- Wareing M.
- Crocker I.P.
- Baker P.N.
- Cartwright J.E.
Uterine spiral artery remodeling involves endothelial apoptosis induced by extravillous trophoblasts through Fas/FasL interactions.
However, pathogenic HCMV strains encode two anti-apoptosis proteins expressed with immediate-early kinetics. In addition to pUL36/vICA, a viral inhibitor of caspase 8–induced apoptosis,
73- Skaletskaya A.
- Bartle L.M.
- Chittenden T.
- McCormick A.L.
- Mocarski E.S.
- Goldmacher V.S.
A cytomegalovirus-encoded inhibitor of apoptosis that suppresses caspase-8 activation.
, 74Human cytomegalovirus UL36 protein is dispensable for viral replication in cultured cells.
pUL37, a viral mitochondria-localized inhibitor of apoptosis, protects cells from death induced by a variety of stimuli.
75- Goldmacher V.S.
- Bartle L.M.
- Skaletskaya A.
- Dionne C.A.
- Kedersha N.L.
- Vater C.A.
- Han J.
- Lutz R.J.
- Watanabe S.
- McFarland E.D.
- Kieff E.D.
- Mocarski E.S.
- Chittenden T.
A cytomegalovirus-encoded mitochondria-localized inhibitor of apoptosis structurally unrelated to Bcl-2.
, 76- McCormick A.L.
- Skaletskaya A.
- Barry P.A.
- Mocarski E.S.
- Goldmacher V.S.
Differential function and expression of the viral inhibitor of caspase 8-induced apoptosis (vICA) and the viral mitochondria-localized inhibitor of apoptosis (vMIA) cell death suppressors conserved in primate and rodent cytomegaloviruses.
, 77- McCormick A.L.
- Smith V.L.
- Chow D.
- Mocarski E.S.
Disruption of mitochondrial networks by the human cytomegalovirus UL37 gene product viral mitochondrion-localized inhibitor of apoptosis.
, 78- Reboredo M.
- Greaves R.F.
- Hahn G.
Human cytomegalovirus proteins encoded by UL37 exon 1 protect infected fibroblasts against virus-induced apoptosis and are required for efficient virus replication.
, 79- Sharon-Friling R.
- Goodhouse J.
- Colberg-Poley A.M.
- Shenk T.
Human cytomegalovirus pUL37x1 induces the release of endoplasmic reticulum calcium stores.
Abundant expression of pUL36/vICA is detected just a few hours after infection and much earlier than pUL37/viral mitochondria–localized inhibitor of apoptosis, which accumulates later in fibroblasts.
73- Skaletskaya A.
- Bartle L.M.
- Chittenden T.
- McCormick A.L.
- Mocarski E.S.
- Goldmacher V.S.
A cytomegalovirus-encoded inhibitor of apoptosis that suppresses caspase-8 activation.
, 74Human cytomegalovirus UL36 protein is dispensable for viral replication in cultured cells.
Coordinate expression of these proteins could maintain survival of infected cells by suppressing apoptosis. Relevant to the results in AD169-infected implants, a mutation in UL36/vICA could delay resistance to Fas-mediated apoptosis.
73- Skaletskaya A.
- Bartle L.M.
- Chittenden T.
- McCormick A.L.
- Mocarski E.S.
- Goldmacher V.S.
A cytomegalovirus-encoded inhibitor of apoptosis that suppresses caspase-8 activation.
Although not formally tested, it is likely that the anti-apoptotic function was encoded later by pUL37/viral mitochondria-localized inhibitor of apoptosis. After 3 weeks
in vivo, the functional consequences include partially remodeled blood vessels, some of which still contained resident arterial endothelial cells expressing ephrin B2 (
Figure 6, C, E, F, and H–K). The human placentation model enabled realization of the anti-apoptotic determinants in HCMV pathogenesis, for the first time to our knowledge, and provides a framework to test the
in vivo effects of a mutation in pUL37.
Lymphangiogenic factors have autocrine and paracrine effects that transduce survival and migratory signals in lymphatic endothelial cells
21- Red-Horse K.
- Rivera J.
- Schanz A.
- Zhou Y.
- Winn V.
- Kapidzic M.
- Maltepe E.
- Okazaki K.
- Kochman R.
- Vo K.C.
- Giudice L.
- Erlebacher A.
- McCune J.M.
- Stoddart C.A.
- Fisher S.J.
Cytotrophoblast induction of arterial apoptosis and lymphangiogenesis in an in vivo model of human placentation.
, 80- Makinen T.
- Veikkola T.
- Mustjoki S.
- Karpanen T.
- Catimel B.
- Nice E.C.
- Wise L.
- Mercer A.
- Kowalski H.
- Kerjaschki D.
- Stacker S.A.
- Achen M.G.
- Alitalo K.
Isolated lymphatic endothelial cells transduce growth, survival and migratory signals via the VEGF-C/D receptor VEGFR-3.
and maintain cytotrophoblast survival.
19- Zhou Y.
- McMaster M.
- Woo K.
- Janatpour M.
- Perry J.
- Karpanen T.
- Alitalo K.
- Damsky C.
- Fisher S.J.
Vascular endothelial growth factor ligands and receptors that regulate human cytotrophoblast survival are dysregulated in severe preeclampsia and hemolysis, elevated liver enzymes, and low platelets syndrome.
, 20- Zhou Y.
- Bellingard V.
- Feng K.T.
- McMaster M.
- Fisher S.J.
Human cytotrophoblasts promote endothelial survival and vascular remodeling through secretion of Ang2, PlGF, and VEGF-C.
Quantification of factors made in VR1814-infected cytotrophoblasts and explants
in vitro showed that VEGF-C and bFGF levels were elevated compared with mock-infected controls (
Figure 7, A–D). In the model of cytotrophoblast-induced lymphangiogenesis
in vivo, these factors and others promote migration of lymphatic endothelial cells.
21- Red-Horse K.
- Rivera J.
- Schanz A.
- Zhou Y.
- Winn V.
- Kapidzic M.
- Maltepe E.
- Okazaki K.
- Kochman R.
- Vo K.C.
- Giudice L.
- Erlebacher A.
- McCune J.M.
- Stoddart C.A.
- Fisher S.J.
Cytotrophoblast induction of arterial apoptosis and lymphangiogenesis in an in vivo model of human placentation.
In functional experiments, we showed that VEGF-A, VEGF-C, and bFGF each had paracrine effects that increased the proliferation of HLEC and, in combination, had additive effects (
Figure 8A). Depletion experiments confirmed the contributions of these factors (
Figure 8B). However, failure of the combined inhibitors to completely reduce proliferation indicates the involvement of other factors. Angiogenic factors are essential for the formation of functional vessels and expression in a complementary and coordinated manner to balance stimulatory and inhibitory signals. The increased production of factors that promote lymphatic endothelial cell proliferation in infected cytotrophoblasts could lead to aggregation that precludes formation of a functional lymphatic vasculature (
Figure 3, C–G) and could contribute to placental edema in congenital HCMV infection.
13- La Torre R.
- Nigro G.
- Mazzocco M.
- Best A.M.
- Adler S.P.
Placental enlargement in women with primary maternal cytomegalovirus infection is associated with fetal and neonatal disease.
, 15- Rana S.
- Venkatesha S.
- DePaepe M.
- Chien E.K.
- Paglia M.
- Karumanchi S.A.
Cyomegalovirus-induced mirror syndrome associated with elevated levels of circulating antiangiogenic factors.
, 81- Sampath V.
- Narendran V.
- Donovan E.F.
- Stanek J.
- Schleiss M.R.
Nonimmune hydrops fetalis and fulminant fatal disease due to congenital cytomegalovirus infection in a premature infant.
, 82Infectious causes of hydrops fetalis.
, 18- Zhou Y.
- Fisher S.J.
- Janatpour M.
- Genbacev O.
- Dejana E.
- Wheelock M.
- Damsky C.H.
Human cytotrophoblasts adopt a vascular phenotype as they differentiate: a strategy for successful endovascular invasion?.
In AD169 infection, elevated levels of bioactive VEGF-A, which increases blood vessel permeability, and sVEGFR-3 (
Figure 7, E–H, and
Figure 8B) could reduce vessel function and normal lymphangiogenesis.
83- Makinen T.
- Jussila L.
- Veikkola T.
- Karpanen T.
- Kettunen M.I.
- Pulkkanen K.J.
- Kauppinen R.
- Jackson D.G.
- Kubo H.
- Nishikawa S.
- Yla-Herttuala S.
- Alitalo K.
Inhibition of lymphangiogenesis with resulting lymphedema in transgenic mice expressing soluble VEGF receptor-3.
Moreover, VEGFR-3 antibodies or delivery of sVEGFR-3-Ig fusion protein by an adenovirus vector inhibits angiogenesis by suppressing endothelial sprouting and vascular network formation.
84- Tammela T.
- Zarkada G.
- Wallgard E.
- Murtomaki A.
- Suchting S.
- Wirzenius M.
- Waltari M.
- Hellstrom M.
- Schomber T.
- Peltonen R.
- Freitas C.
- Duarte A.
- Isoniemi H.
- Laakkonen P.
- Christofori G.
- Yla-Herttuala S.
- Shibuya M.
- Pytowski B.
- Eichmann A.
- Betsholtz C.
- Alitalo K.
Blocking VEGFR-3 suppresses angiogenic sprouting and vascular network formation.
Accordingly, dysregulated factors could result in blood vessels composed of both lymphatic endothelial cells and invasive cytotrophoblasts (
Figures 5H and
6D). Not previously described, this chimeric vasculature was hyperpermeable to blood, conceivably from incorporation of lymphatic endothelial cells that have junctions specialized for fluid uptake from surrounding tissue.
85- Baluk P.
- Fuxe J.
- Hashizume H.
- Romano T.
- Lashnits E.
- Butz S.
- Vestweber D.
- Corada M.
- Molendini C.
- Dejana E.
- McDonald D.M.
Functionally specialized junctions between endothelial cells of lymphatic vessels.
Blood flow could exert pressure on the vessel wall, resulting in leakiness. In contrast to recent reports of a role for elevated IL-6 in HCMV-infected lymphatic endothelial cells in lymphangiogenesis,
65- Fiorentini S.
- Luganini A.
- Dell'oste V.
- Lorusso B.
- Cervi E.
- Caccuri F.
- Bonardelli S.
- Landolfo S.
- Caruso A.
- Gribaudo G.
Human cytomegalovirus productively infects lymphatic endothelial cells and induces a secretome that promotes angiogenesis and lymphangiogenesis through interleukin-6 and granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor.
endothelial cell survival and angiogenesis,
86- Botto S.
- Streblow D.N.
- DeFilippis V.
- White L.
- Kreklywich C.N.
- Smith P.P.
- Caposio P.
IL-6 in human cytomegalovirus secretome promotes angiogenesis and survival of endothelial cells through the stimulation of survivin.
and detection of increased IL-6 in AD169-infected trophoblasts immediately after infection,
14- Maidji E.
- Nigro G.
- Tabata T.
- McDonagh S.
- Nozawa N.
- Shiboski S.
- Muci S.
- Anceschi M.M.
- Aziz N.
- Adler S.P.
- Pereira L.
Antibody treatment promotes compensation for human cytomegalovirus-induced pathogenesis and a hypoxia-like condition in placentas with congenital infection.
we found no significant increase in AD169- and VR1814-infected cytotrophoblasts and villous explants at either 1 or 3 days (
Figure 7, I and J).
Vascular anomalies associated with congenital HCMV infection found in placentas examined at delivery include avascular villi and fibrosis that reduce blood flow to the placental-fetal unit and lead to a condition of intrauterine hypoxia.
12- Garcia A.G.
- Fonseca E.F.
- Marques R.L.
- Lobato Y.Y.
Placental morphology in cytomegalovirus infection.
, 14- Maidji E.
- Nigro G.
- Tabata T.
- McDonagh S.
- Nozawa N.
- Shiboski S.
- Muci S.
- Anceschi M.M.
- Aziz N.
- Adler S.P.
- Pereira L.
Antibody treatment promotes compensation for human cytomegalovirus-induced pathogenesis and a hypoxia-like condition in placentas with congenital infection.
To compensate, placentas increase levels of VEGF-A, which promotes vascular development in the villous core.
12- Garcia A.G.
- Fonseca E.F.
- Marques R.L.
- Lobato Y.Y.
Placental morphology in cytomegalovirus infection.
, 14- Maidji E.
- Nigro G.
- Tabata T.
- McDonagh S.
- Nozawa N.
- Shiboski S.
- Muci S.
- Anceschi M.M.
- Aziz N.
- Adler S.P.
- Pereira L.
Antibody treatment promotes compensation for human cytomegalovirus-induced pathogenesis and a hypoxia-like condition in placentas with congenital infection.
Congenital HCMV infection is associated with 15% of stillbirths and death
in utero after 20 weeks' gestation, and the placentas have significant thrombotic vasculopathy,
87- Syridou G.
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Detection of cytomegalovirus, parvovirus B19 and herpes simplex viruses in cases of intrauterine fetal death: association with pathological findings.
, 88- Iwasenko J.M.
- Howard J.
- Arbuckle S.
- Graf N.
- Hall B.
- Craig M.E.
- Rawlinson W.D.
Human cytomegalovirus infection is detected frequently in stillbirths and is associated with fetal thrombotic vasculopathy.
evidence that links HCMV infection to vascular damage and fetal morbidity.
89Have we overlooked congenital cytomegalovirus infection as a cause of stillbirth?.
Congenital infection with premature delivery and biopsy specimens with bleeding near partially modified or unmodified uterine blood vessels (
Figure 9, E and F) suggest that defective endovascular cytotrophoblast invasion can lead to bleeding in the uterine wall. Other complications of congenital infection include placental edema and fetal hydrops
13- La Torre R.
- Nigro G.
- Mazzocco M.
- Best A.M.
- Adler S.P.
Placental enlargement in women with primary maternal cytomegalovirus infection is associated with fetal and neonatal disease.
, 15- Rana S.
- Venkatesha S.
- DePaepe M.
- Chien E.K.
- Paglia M.
- Karumanchi S.A.
Cyomegalovirus-induced mirror syndrome associated with elevated levels of circulating antiangiogenic factors.
, 81- Sampath V.
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- Donovan E.F.
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- Schleiss M.R.
Nonimmune hydrops fetalis and fulminant fatal disease due to congenital cytomegalovirus infection in a premature infant.
, 82Infectious causes of hydrops fetalis.
associated with impaired placental development that contributes to IUGR and hypoxia.
90- Noyola D.E.
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Early predictors of neurodevelopmental outcome in symptomatic congenital cytomegalovirus infection.
By using the
in vivo model of human placentation, we identified dramatic defects in cytotrophoblast differentiation, invasion, and vascular remodeling that could reduce perfusion of the placental surface
in utero.
26- Fisher S.
- Genbacev O.
- Maidji E.
- Pereira L.
Human cytomegalovirus infection of placental cytotrophoblasts in vitro and in utero: implications for transmission and pathogenesis.
, 27- Yamamoto-Tabata T.
- McDonagh S.
- Chang H.T.
- Fisher S.
- Pereira L.
Human cytomegalovirus interleukin-10 downregulates metalloproteinase activity and impairs endothelial cell migration and placental cytotrophoblast invasiveness in vitro.
, 28- Tabata T.
- McDonagh S.
- Kawakatsu H.
- Pereira L.
Cytotrophoblasts infected with a pathogenic human cytomegalovirus strain dysregulate cell-matrix and cell-cell adhesion molecules: a quantitative analysis.
Our results also suggest that paracrine factors could amplify pathology in the decidua by altering lymphangiogenesis, establishing the human placentation model as an experimental system with which to interrogate determinants of viral pathogenesis. We also anticipate that placental explants and xenografts in SCID mice will be invaluable tools for evaluating human monoclonal antibodies with HCMV neutralizing activity as potential treatments that could reduce virus replication and associated pathology in the developing placenta.
Article info
Publication history
Published online: September 10, 2012
Accepted:
August 1,
2012
Footnotes
Supported by grants from the NIH (R21 AI090200, R01 AI046657, and R56 AI073753 to L.P.; R21 HD061890 to T.T.), grants from the International Aids Vaccine Initiative UCALIFRSA1002 (L.P.), Japan Research Fund SHC4401 (N.I.), and a Scholarship Award in Herpesvirus Research from the Japan Herpesvirus Infections Forum (N.N.).
Current address of N.N., Drug Discovery Research Laboratories, Maruho Co, LTD, Kyoto, Japan.
Copyright
© 2012 American Society for Investigative Pathology. Published by Elsevier Inc.