4.6 Review

A Journey to the Central Nervous System: Routes of Flaviviral Neuroinvasion in Human Disease

Journal

VIRUSES-BASEL
Volume 14, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/v14102096

Keywords

neuroinvasion; flavivirus; blood-brain barrier; brain microvascular endothelial cells; blood-cerebrospinal fluid barrier; olfactory tract; spinal cord

Categories

Funding

  1. Dutch Research Council (NWO) [NWA.1160.1S.210]

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This review focuses on the mechanisms of arboviral neuroinvasion, specifically on the haematogenous and transneural routes employed by flaviviruses. The gaps in knowledge regarding lesser-studied interfaces and novel routes are identified. The complex balance of pro-inflammatory and antiviral immune responses, particularly in the context of the hypothesized Trojan horse mechanism, is also discussed.
Many arboviruses, including viruses of the Flavivirus genera, are known to cause severe neurological disease in humans, often with long-lasting, debilitating sequalae in surviving patients. These emerging pathogens impact millions of people worldwide, yet still relatively little is known about the exact mechanisms by which they gain access to the human central nervous system. This review focusses on potential haematogenous and transneural routes of neuroinvasion employed by flaviviruses and identifies numerous gaps in knowledge, especially regarding lesser-studied interfaces of possible invasion such as the blood-cerebrospinal fluid barrier, and novel routes such as the gut-brain axis. The complex balance of pro-inflammatory and antiviral immune responses to viral neuroinvasion and pathology is also discussed, especially in the context of the hypothesised Trojan horse mechanism of neuroinvasion. A greater understanding of the routes and mechanisms of arboviral neuroinvasion, and how they differ between viruses, will aid in predictive assessments of the neuroinvasive potential of new and emerging arboviruses, and may provide opportunity for attenuation, development of novel intervention strategies and rational vaccine design for highly neurovirulent arboviruses.

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