"It is a Trojan Horse strategy," said Alysson Muotri, professor at University of California San Diego in the US.
"During embryogenesis - the early stages of prenatal development - cells called microglia form in the yolk sac and then disperse throughout the central nervous system (CNS) of the developing child," said Muotri.
In the brain, these microglia will become resident macrophages whose job is to constantly clear away plaques, damaged cells and infectious agents, researchers said.
"Our findings show that the Zika virus can infect these early microglia, sneaking into the brain where they transmit the virus to other brain cells, resulting in the devastating neurological damage we see in some newborns," Muotri said.
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Researchers found that the microglia cells engulfed Zika-infected NPCs, doing their job. However, when these microglia carrying the virus were placed in contact with non- infected NPCs, they transmitted the virus to the latter.
"That suggests microglia may indeed be the culprit for transmitting the virus to the CNS during prenatal neurodevelopment," Muotri said.
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