Monkeypox virus replication and host response in vaginal and ectocervical epithelial cells.

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作者:Mariotti Davide, Picarone Ludovica, D'Auria Alessandra, Rosa Luigi, Valeriani Valentina, Pietrucci Daniele, Meschi Silvia, Carletti Fabrizio, Mazzotta Valentina, Antonelli Guido, Girardi Enrico, Scagnolari Carolina, Chillemi Giovanni, Antinori Andrea, Maggi Fabrizio, Matusali Giulia
Recent mpox outbreaks have shown a predominant transmission through sexual contact. Replication-competent virus has been detected in seminal fluid, while in female patients, vaginal lesions, vertical transmission, and miscarriage risk have been reported. This study explored the susceptibility of the lower female genital tract (LFGT) to monkeypox virus (MPXV) infection, the role of sex-hormones in modulating viral replication, and host-virus molecular interactions. Human vaginal (VK2/E6E7) and ectocervical (Ect1/E6E7) epithelial cells were exposed to MPXV clade IIb, and viral replication was assessed. The influence of sex-hormones was evaluated after pretreatment with physiological concentrations of 17-β-estradiol or progesterone. Cellular genes' expression was determined by RT-qPCR and RNAseq, and ELISA was used for protein release analysis. Both cell lines supported productive MPXV infection. 17-β -estradiol and progesterone slightly reduced viral replication in Ect1/E6E7. At 48 hours post-infection, compared to uninfected control, 216 differentially expressed genes (DEGs) were identified in MPXV infected VK2/E6E7 and 11 in Ect1/E6E7, with nine shared DEGs involved in protein folding (HSPA6), chemotaxis (CXCL3, ARC), inflammation and lymphoproliferation (IL11, IL1RL1, MMP-1), and tissue remodeling (IGFN1, MMP-1). MPXV infection significantly increased MMP-1 release in both cell lines, and MMP-1 inhibitors reduced infectious virus production. IFN-β and IFN-λ1 were induced earlier and more pronouncedly in Ect1/E6E7 which also showed slower viral replication than VK2/E6E7. Our analysis demonstrated the MPXV-mediated modulation of common and tissue-specific cellular pathways in the LFGT. The perturbation of tissue remodeling and inflammation in this district has the potential to affect reproductive health and susceptibility to sexually-transmitted-infections.

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