Abstract
Enterovirus A71 (EV-A71) was first reported in the USA, and numerous outbreaks have since occurred in Asia and Europe. EV-A71 re-emerged as a new multirecombinant strain in 2015 in Europe and is now widespread. The virus causes hand-foot-and-mouth disease in young children and is involved in nervous system infections. How the virus spreads to the nervous system is unclear. We investigated whether white blood cells could be infected by EV-A71 and transmit it across human endothelial cells mimicking the blood–brain barrier protecting the brain from adverse effects. We found that endothelial cells provide a strong roadblock to prevent the passage of free virus particles but allow the migration of infected immune cells, including monocytes, neutrophils, and NK/T cells. Our data are consistent with the potential role of immune cells in the pathogenesis of EV-A71 infections by spreading the virus in the blood and across the human blood–brain barrier.
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CITATION STYLE
Gaume, L., Chabrolles, H., Bisseux, M., Lopez-Coqueiro, I., Dehouck, L., Mirand, A., … Bailly, J.-L. (2024). Enterovirus A71 crosses a human blood–brain barrier model through infected immune cells. Microbiology Spectrum, 12(6). https://doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.00690-24
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