Neurotropic virus

A neurotropic virus is a virus that is capable of infecting nerve cells.[1]

Terminology

A neurotropic virus is said to be neuroinvasive if it is capable of accessing or entering the nervous system and neurovirulent if it is capable of causing disease within the nervous system. Both terms are often applied to central nervous system infections, although some neurotropic viruses are highly neuroinvasive for the peripheral nervous system (e.g. herpes simplex virus). Important neuroinvasive viruses include poliovirus, which is highly neurovirulent but weakly neuroinvasive, and rabies virus, which is highly neurovirulent but requires tissue trauma (often resulting from an animal bite) to become neuroinvasive. Using these definitions, herpes simplex virus is highly neuroinvasive for the peripheral nervous system and rarely neuroinvasive for the central nervous system, but in the latter case may cause herpesviral encephalitis and is therefore considered highly neurovirulent. Many arthropod-borne neurotropic viruses, like West Nile virus, spread to the brain primarily via the blood system by crossing the blood-brain barrier in what is called hematogenous dissemination.

Examples

Neurotropic viruses that cause infection include Japanese Encephalitis, Venezuelan Equine Encephalitis, and California encephalitis viruses; polio, coxsackie, echo, mumps, measles, influenza and rabies, as well as diseases caused by members of the family Herpesviridae such as herpes simplex, varicella-zoster, Epstein–Barr, cytomegalovirus and HHV-6 viruses.[2]

Those causing latent infection include herpes simplex and varicella-zoster viruses. Those causing slow virus infection include measles virus, rubella and JC viruses, and retroviruses such as human T-lymphotropic virus 1 and HIV.

Research use

Neurotropic viruses are increasingly being exploited as research tools, and for their potential use in treatment. In particular, they are being used to improve the understanding of the nervous systems circuits.[3][4]

Other neurotropic infections

Several diseases, including transmissible spongiform encephalopathy, kuru, and Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease resemble a slow neurotropic virus infectionbut are, in fact, caused by the infectious proteins known as prions.[5]

gollark: I know of simple to pose problems with really hard solutions, but not the other way round.
gollark: Hmm. It seems to have realized that there is actually a really simple solution. Sad.
gollark: I could try using RIES for it.
gollark: If it's some weird chipher, try frequency analysis.
gollark: You can technically worry people by saying "X was the case" or "X will be the case" about *any* mathematical claim, since they're true in the past and future!

See also

References

  1. Word Reference: Neurotropic
  2. Hotta H. (Apr 1997). "[Neurotropic viruses--classification, structure and characteristics]". Nihon Rinsho. 55 (4): 777–82. PMID 9103870.
  3. Advances in Virus Research, Volume 55, Karl Maramorosch
  4. Neurovirological methods and their applications, P G E Kennedy
  5. Hotta H. (Apr 1997). "[Neurotropic viruses--classification, structure and characteristics]". Nihon Rinsho. 55 (4): 777–82. PMID 9103870.
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