4.7 Article

The Preferential Infection of Astrocytes by Enterovirus 71 Plays a Key Role in the Viral Neurogenic Pathogenesis

Journal

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fcimb.2016.00192

Keywords

enterovirus 71 (EV71); central nervous system (CNS); astrocytes; neuron; pathogenesis

Funding

  1. Technology Development Research institutes [2013EG150137]
  2. National Natural Sciences Foundation of China [81171573, 31370192]
  3. State Project for Essential Drug Research and Development [2012ZX09101319, 2014ZX09102042]
  4. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [2016ZX310047, 2016ZX310179-2]
  5. CAMS Initiative for Innovative Medicine [2016-I2M-1-019]
  6. Natural Science Foundation of Yunnan Province [2013FA024, 2014FB191]

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The pathological manifestations of fatal cases of human hand, foot, and mouth disease (HFMD) caused by enterovirus 71 (EV71) are characterized by inflammatory damage to the central nervous system (CNS). Here, the dynamic distribution of EV71 in the CNS and the subsequent pathological characteristics within different regions of neonatal rhesus macaque brain tissue were studied using a chimeric EV71 expressing green fluorescence protein. The results were compared with brain tissue obtained from the autopsies of deceased EV71-infected HFMD patients. These observations suggested that the virus was prevalent in areas around the blood vessels and nerve nuclei in the brain stem and showed a preference for astrocytes in the CNS. Interestingly, infected astrocytes within the in vivo and in vitro human and macaque systems exhibited increased expression of excitatory neurotransmitters and cytokines that also stimulated the neuronal secretion of the excitatory neurotransmitters noradrenalin and adrenalin, and this process most likely plays a role in the pathophysiological events that occur during EV71 infection.

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