Axonal spread of neuroinvasive viral infections.

Publication Year
2015

Type

Journal Article
Abstract

Neuroinvasive viral infections invade the nervous system, often eliciting serious disease and death. Members of four viral families are both neuroinvasive and capable of transmitting progeny virions or virion components within the long neuronal extensions known as axons. Axons provide physical structures that enable viral infection to spread within the host while avoiding extracellular immune responses. Technological advances in the analysis of in vivo neural circuits, neuronal culturing, and live imaging of fluorescent fusion proteins have enabled an unprecedented view into the steps of virion assembly, transport, and egress involved in axonal spread. In this review we summarize the literature supporting anterograde (axon to cell) spread of viral infection, describe the various strategies of virion transport, and discuss the effects of spread on populations of neuroinvasive viruses.

Journal
Trends Microbiol
Volume
23
Issue
5
Pages
283-8
Date Published
05/2015
ISSN Number
1878-4380
Alternate Journal
Trends Microbiol.
PMID
25639651