A Single Genetic Tweak Could Explain How Zika Transformed Into A Devastating Virus

It used to be a fairly harmless illness.

CHICAGO, Sept 28 (Reuters) - A single genetic change that occurred in 2013 may explain how Zika acquired the ability to attack fetal nerve cells, causing a severe birth defect in babies whose mothers were infected while pregnant, Chinese and U.S. researchers reported on Thursday.

Scientists have posited many theories about why Zika, a mosquito-borne virus that had been linked with only mild symptoms since its discovery in 1947, could suddenly be associated with thousands of cases of the birth defect known as microcephaly, as it was in Brazil in 2015.

That outbreak prompted the World Health Organization to declare Zika a public health emergency in 2016, and set off a scientific quest to determine whether Zika could cause microcephaly, a condition marked by small head size.

Several teams have already traced the virus circulating in Brazil and elsewhere in South America to a strain of Zika that had been quietly circulating in Southeast Asia for decades.

In the new study, published in Science, Ling Yuan of the Chinese Academy of Sciences and colleagues compared genetic changes in samples of the South American virus with one isolated in 2010 in Cambodia.

They created seven sample viruses, each with a single genetic difference from the Cambodian strain, and tested these in brains of fetal mice. Although the viruses caused some degree of damage in all, those infected with a virus that carried a single mutation in a structural protein called prM developed severe microcephaly. That strain also proved more lethal to fetal brain cells.

The team estimates the genetic change occurred in May 2013, just before a French Polynesian outbreak of Zika in which the first cases of microcephaly and Guillain-Barre, a rare neurological disorder, were noted.

“Our findings offer an explanation for the unexpected causal link of Zika to microcephaly, and will help understand how Zika evolved from an innocuous mosquito-borne virus to a congenital pathogen with global impact,” Yuan and colleagues wrote.

One study author, Dr. Pei-Yong Shi of the University of Texas Medical Branch in Galveston, Texas, said other mutations also fueled the explosive epidemic, including one he and others reported on in May in the journal Nature that enhanced Zika’s ability to infect Aedes aegypti mosquitoes, which carry the virus.

Last November, WHO pronounced Zika no longer an international emergency, but stressed that the virus, found in at least 60 countries, will keep spreading where mosquitoes that carry Zika are present. (Reporting by Julie Steenhuysen; editing by Susan Thomas)

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Before You Go

Athletes Who've Spoken Out About Zika And The Olympics
Serena Williams(01 of13)
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U.S. champion tennis player Serena Williams, 34, has admitted that the Zika virus is weighing on her as the Olympics approaches.

"[That’s] something that’s been on my mind,” Williams said to USA Today in May. “I’m really just going to have to go super protected maybe. I don’t know."

In a later interview with Glamour magazine, she said, “I’m not taking Zika lightly.”
(credit:Jacky Naegelen / Reuters)
Pau Gasol(02 of13)
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Pau Gasol, 35, plays basketball for the Chicago Bulls and competes for Spain in the Olympics. Back in May, he revealed that he and other athletes are concerned about how Zika virus could affect the health of their families and future children.

Gasol eventually decided to compete in the Olympics, but expressed doubts that event organizers are doing all they can to prioritize health in an op-ed for the Spanish publication Marca.

"I will be going hoping and trusting that the people and organizations will do everything possible and take measures to minimize possible risk to the athletes,” wrote Gasol, according to ESPN. "I have always had the doubt that they -- so as not to put other elements of the event in danger -- have not been mindful of the health and safety of the athletes and all those who will attend the Olympics in Rio -- whether those people are athletes, accompanying family, friends or fans. It is a pity that [the situation] is like this.”
(credit:Gary Dineen via Getty Images)
Hope Solo(03 of13)
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Star soccer player Hope Solo, 34, took a stand back in February that “female athletes should not be forced to make a decision that could sacrifice the health of a child” and expressed discomfort at having to compete in Brazil for Team USA.

But in May, Solo said that she would “begrudgingly” compete in the Olympics, though revealed that she might not leave her hotel room except to practice or play soccer.
(credit:USA Today Sports / Reuters)
Alex Morgan(04 of13)
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Like her teammate Hope Solo, soccer player Alex Morgan, 26, hopes to have children one day and is also concerned about getting Zika virus.

"I am concerned, but I really do trust the International Olympic Committee about traveling in Brazil,” Morgan told Health.com in May. "It is kind of scary."
(credit:Wolfgang Rattay / Reuters)
Tejay van Garderen(05 of13)
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In June, 27-year-old Tejay van Garderen became the first U.S. athlete to sit out the Olympics over Zika fears. He is currently also the only non-golfer to decide to withdraw. His wife is currently pregnant, and the cyclist said that if anything happened to their child because of his decision to compete in Rio, he wouldn’t be able to forgive himself.

“People are probably going to have different opinions on this,” van Garderen told CyclingTips.com. "I’m sure they will think what they are going to think, but the fact is, if anything were to happen, I couldn’t live with myself.”

At the time of his interview, van Garderen had yet to be selected for the Olympic team, but he had competed in the 2012 Olympics and was a likely pick for Team USA this year, CyclingTips.com explained.
(credit:Bogdan Cristel / Reuters)
Lee-Anne Pace(06 of13)
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South African golfer Lee-Anne Pace, 35, is the first female athlete to withdraw from the Rio Olympics due to concerns over the Zika virus.

"After weighing up all the options and discussing it with my family and team, I have decided that due to the health concerns surrounding the Zika Virus, I will not be participating," the athlete said in a statement released on Twitter. "I hope that everyone can understand that this was a very difficult decision to come to, however my health and my future family's health must come first."

Pace said she was proud to represent South Africa on the LPGA tour.
(credit:Scott Halleran via Getty Images)
Marc Leishman(07 of13)
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Marc Leishman, 32, declined to represent Australia in this year’s Olympics and gave a very personal reason: the health of his wife, Audrey. In a statement released by PGA Australia in May, Leishman explained that Audrey almost died of toxic shock syndrome in 2015, and continues to be prone to infection because her immune system isn’t fully recovered.

"We have consulted with Audrey's physician and due to her ongoing recovery and potential risks associated with the transmission of the Zika virus it was a difficult yet easy decision not to participate,” Leishman said.
(credit:USA Today Sports / Reuters)
Jason Day(08 of13)
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Jason Day of Australia, the world's current number one-ranked golfer, has decided to skip the Rio Olympics and cites Zika as his main concern. In a statement he released on Twitter, Day said that he and his wife would like to have more children in the future, and that Zika virus may imperil future pregnancies and the health of "future members of our family."

"While it has always been a major goal to compete in the Olympics on behalf of my country, playing golf cannot take precedent over the safety of our family," Day said. "I will not place them at risk."
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Vijay Singh(09 of13)
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Vijay Singh, 53, who held the rank of the number one golfer in the world for 32 weeks in 2004, told the Golf Channel in April that he will not represent Fiji in the Olympics.

In addition to concerns about Zika, Singh also said that he had to focus on the PGA tour. "I would like to play the Olympics, but the Zika virus, you know and all that crap,” he said.
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Charl Schwartzel(10 of13)
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Citing his wish to continue growing his family with his wife, 31-year-old golfer Charl Schwartzel of South Africa announced in June that he is skipping the Olympics over concerns about Zika.

Schwartzel has a young daughter, and said that if he were single, didn’t want to have more children, or if the Olympics were being hosted by a country that wasn’t struggling with Zika virus, then he would be competing, he explained.

“If it was anywhere else, I'd play," Schwartzel said to AP. "I'd love to play in the Olympics."
(credit:Russell Cheyne / Reuters)
Rory McIlroy(11 of13)
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Golfer Rory McIlroy, 27, announced he will not compete for Ireland in this year’s Rio Olympics out of concern for his and his family’s health. He is engaged.

"After speaking with those closest to me, I've come to realize that my health and my family's health comes before anything else,” McIlroy said in a statement released in June. "Even though the risk of infection from the Zika virus is considered low, it is a risk nonetheless and a risk I am unwilling to take.”
(credit:USA Today Sports / Reuters)
Hideki Matsuyama(12 of13)
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Japanese golf star Hideki Matsuyama announced July 3 that he would not compete in the Olympics because of concerns about Zika virus.

"Although I am excited that golf is returning to the Olympics and I realize that my potential success would help grow the game in Japan, I have come to the conclusion that I cannot put myself or my team members' health at risk," Matsuyama said in a statement.

"I have been getting information from all the concerned parties as well as my doctors about the situation in Rio, but I cannot be 100 percent sure about my safety, and my team's safety, from the Zika virus," he continued. “Additionally, my body has a tendency to react strongly to insect bites.”
(credit:USA Today Sports / Reuters)
Jordan Speith(13 of13)
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U.S. golfer Jordan Speith, 22, announced his withdrawal from the Olympics on July 11, citing "health reasons."

But in past interviews, Speith has expressed concern about Zika virus and security threats in Rio.
(credit:Reuters Staff / Reuters)

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