Virus infection of the cns disrupts the immune-neural-synaptic axis via induction of pleiotropic gene regulation of host responses

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Abstract

Treatment for many viral infections of the central nervous system (CNS) remains only supportive. Here we address a remaining gap in our knowledge regarding how the CNS and immune systems interact during viral infection. By examining the regulation of the immune and nervous system processes in a nonhuman primate model of West Nile virus neurological disease, we show that virus infection disrupts the homeostasis of the immune-neural-synaptic axis via induction of pleiotropic genes with distinct functions in each component of the axis. This pleiotropic gene regulation suggests an unintended off-target negative impact of virus-induced host immune responses on the neurotransmission, which may be a common feature of various viral infections of the CNS.

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Maximova, O. A., Sturdevant, D. E., Kash, J. C., Kanakabandi, K., Xiao, Y., Minai, M., … Pletnev, A. G. (2021). Virus infection of the cns disrupts the immune-neural-synaptic axis via induction of pleiotropic gene regulation of host responses. ELife, 10, 1–37. https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.62273

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