[HTML][HTML] West Nile virus spreads transsynaptically within the pathways of motor control: anatomical and ultrastructural mapping of neuronal virus infection in the …

OA Maximova, JG Bernbaum… - PLoS neglected tropical …, 2016 - journals.plos.org
OA Maximova, JG Bernbaum, AG Pletnev
PLoS neglected tropical diseases, 2016journals.plos.org
Background During recent West Nile virus (WNV) outbreaks in the US, half of the reported
cases were classified as neuroinvasive disease. WNV neuroinvasion is proposed to follow
two major routes: hematogenous and/or axonal transport along the peripheral nerves. How
virus spreads once within the central nervous system (CNS) remains unknown.
Methodology/Principal Findings Using immunohistochemistry, we examined the expression
of viral antigens in the CNS of rhesus monkeys that were intrathalamically inoculated with a …
Background
During recent West Nile virus (WNV) outbreaks in the US, half of the reported cases were classified as neuroinvasive disease. WNV neuroinvasion is proposed to follow two major routes: hematogenous and/or axonal transport along the peripheral nerves. How virus spreads once within the central nervous system (CNS) remains unknown.
Methodology/Principal Findings
Using immunohistochemistry, we examined the expression of viral antigens in the CNS of rhesus monkeys that were intrathalamically inoculated with a wild-type WNV. The localization of WNV within the CNS was mapped to specific neuronal groups and anatomical structures. The neurological functions related to structures containing WNV-labeled neurons were reviewed and summarized. Intraneuronal localization of WNV was investigated by electron microscopy. The known anatomical connectivity of WNV-labeled neurons was used to reconstruct the directionality of WNV spread within the CNS using a connectogram design. Anatomical mapping revealed that all structures identified as containing WNV-labeled neurons belonged to the pathways of motor control. Ultrastructurally, virions were found predominantly within vesicular structures (including autophagosomes) in close vicinity to the axodendritic synapses, either at pre- or post-synaptic positions (axonal terminals and dendritic spines, respectively), strongly indicating transsynaptic spread of the virus between connected neurons. Neuronal connectivity-based reconstruction of the directionality of transsynaptic virus spread suggests that, within the CNS, WNV can utilize both anterograde and retrograde axonal transport to infect connected neurons.
Conclusions/Significance
This study offers a new insight into the neuropathogenesis of WNV infection in a primate model that closely mimics WNV encephalomyelitis in humans. We show that within the primate CNS, WNV primarily infects the anatomical structures and pathways responsible for the control of movement. Our findings also suggest that WNV most likely propagates within the CNS transsynaptically, by both, anterograde and retrograde axonal transport.
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