Monday, May 25, 2026
ADVT 
Health

Lab Study Supports Linking Zika Virus To Brain Birth Defect

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Mar, 2016 10:55 AM
    NEW YORK — A lab study has found that Zika can infect embryonic cells that help form the brain, adding to evidence that the virus causes a serious birth defect.
     
    The mosquito-borne virus, which is spreading in Latin America and the Caribbean, normally causes only mild symptoms, if any in adults. But scientists are alarmed by indications that when it infects a pregnant woman, her baby may be born with a small head and a brain that hasn't developed properly.
     
    Researchers suspect Zika infection causes the condition, called microcephaly, but are still trying to prove it. Reports have documented traces of the virus in the brains of babies with microcephaly who'd died soon after birth, and in fetal brain tissue after abortion.
     
    The new work provides experimental evidence that once the virus reaches the developing brain, it can infect and harm cells that are key for further brain development, said Hengli Tang of Florida State University, a lead author of the work.
     
    Results were released Friday by the journal Cell Stem Cell.
     
    The study found that infection can harm these cells in two ways: killing some outright and damaging the ability of others to divide and grow in number. The cells, when healthy, help build the part of the brain that is affected in microcephaly, Tang said. So it would make sense that the damaging effect of Zika on those cells may bring on that condition, he said.
     
     
    But he stressed that his study does not prove that Zika causes microcephaly, nor that it works by that route. A number of other viruses are known to trigger the condition.
     
    Researchers did not take the brain cells from embryos; they created them from stem cells obtained from other sources.
     
    Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, who did not participate in the research, agreed that the study doesn't prove a link to Zika. But "it certainly adds weight to the argument," he said.
     
    And the idea that Zika may cause the condition by harming the specific kind of brain cell used in the study is feasible, he said.
     
    Researchers also found that infected cells pump out more virus.
     
    Dr. Guo-li Ming of Johns Hopkins University, another lead study author, said researchers can now explore questions like how Zika infects the cells.
     
     
    Tang said he is collaborating with other labs to look for substances that will block Zika infection of cells. If such a substance can be turned into a drug, it might be useful to give to pregnant women in high-risk areas who've been bitten by mosquitoes, he said. Such treatment might suppress the amount of virus in a woman's body, which in turn may reduce the risk of infecting her fetus, Tang said.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Even indoor tanning raises melanoma risk

    Even indoor tanning raises melanoma risk
    Do you use indoor tanning believing that this is safe? Beware as this may increase the chances of your developing melanoma, an alarming study says.

    Even indoor tanning raises melanoma risk

    Young women! Husky voice may kill your job chances

    Young women! Husky voice may kill your job chances
    Good work experience and a charming personality fine but a deep, husky voice could be a deterrent for a young woman to land a good job.

    Young women! Husky voice may kill your job chances

    'I can' mentality can help shed extra fat

    'I can' mentality can help shed extra fat
    Want to maintain your slim figure years after childbirth? Develop an "I can" mentality whenever confronted with barriers to your everyday physical activities, a study suggested.

    'I can' mentality can help shed extra fat

    People in desk jobs gain weight for sure

    People in desk jobs gain weight for sure
    If you have gained extra waistline, do not get enough sunlight for your bones and strain your eyes in front of a computer screen, you have all reasons to complain about your desk job.

    People in desk jobs gain weight for sure

    Revealed: How cancer cells spread

    Revealed: How cancer cells spread
    The migration of cancer cells from the primary tumour to nearby tissues and organs is regulated by a signalling pathway in a finely orchestrated manner, researchers have discovered.

    Revealed: How cancer cells spread

    Sunlight deficiency causing bone-health problems in young Women

    Sunlight deficiency causing bone-health problems in young Women
    Sunlight missing from the lives of busy young women is making them deficient in Vitamin D, which has emerged as a major health issue among them, experts say. Vitamin D deficiency in young girls can precipitate osteoporosis and increase the risk of fractures.

    Sunlight deficiency causing bone-health problems in young Women