Zika virus encephalitis in immunocompetent mice is dominated by innate immune cells and does not require T or B cells.
Emina HayashidaZheng Lung LingThomas M AshhurstBarney ViengkhouSo Ri JungPattama SongkhunawejPhillip K WestNicholas J C KingMarkus J HoferPublished in: Journal of neuroinflammation (2019)
Using intracranial infection of immunocompetent wild-type mice with ZIKV, we demonstrate that in contrast to the peripheral immune system, the CNS is susceptible to infection and responds to ZIKV by initiating an antiviral immune response. This response is dominated by resident microglia and infiltrating monocytes and macrophages but does not require T or B cells. Unlike in the periphery, IFN-Is in the CNS cannot prevent the establishment of infection. Our findings show that ZIKV encephalitis in mice is dependent on the innate immune response, and adaptive immune cells play at most a minor role in disease pathogenesis.