Neuroimmunology of rabies: New insights into an ancient disease

Author:

Bastos Victor12,Pacheco Vinicius2,Rodrigues Érika D. L.2,Moraes Cássia N. S.2,Nóbile Adriel L.1,Fonseca Dennyson Leandro M.3,Souza Kamilla B. S.4,do Vale Fernando Y. N.1,Filgueiras Igor S.4,Schimke Lena F.4,Giil Lasse M.5,Moll Guido6ORCID,Cabral‐Miranda Gustavo4,Ochs Hans D.7,Vasconcelos Pedro F. da Costa28,de Melo Guilherme D.9,Bourhy Hervé9,Casseb Livia M. N.2,Cabral‐Marques Otavio14101112ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Postgraduate Program of Physiopathology and Toxicology University of São Paulo São Paulo Brazil

2. Department of Arbovirology and Hemorrhagic Fevers, PAHO Collaborating Centre for Emerging and Reemerging Arboviruses and other Zoonotic Viruses Evandro Chagas Institute Ananindeua Brazil

3. Interunit Postgraduate Program on Bioinformatics, Institute of Mathematics and Statistics (IME) University of São Paulo São Paulo Brazil

4. Department of Immunology University of São Paulo São Paulo Brazil

5. Department of Internal Medicine Haraldsplass Deaconess Hospital Bergen Norway

6. Department of Nephrology and Internal Intensive Care Medicine Charité University Hospital Berlin Germany

7. School of Medicine and Seattle Children's Research Institute University of Washington Seattle Washington USA

8. Department of Pathology University of the State of Pará Belem Brazil

9. Lyssavirus Epidemiology and Neuropathology Unit, WHO Collaborating Centre for Reference and Research on Rabies, Institut Pasteur Université Paris Cité Paris France

10. Network of Immunity in Infection, Malignancy, Autoimmunity (NIIMA) Universal Scientific Education and Research Network (USERN) São Paulo Brazil

11. Department of Medicine, Division of Molecular Medicine University of São Paulo School of Medicine São Paulo Brazil

12. Laboratory of Medical Investigation 29, School of Medicine University of São Paulo São Paulo Brazil

Abstract

AbstractRabies is an ancient neuroinvasive viral (genus Lyssavirus, family Rhabdoviridae) disease affecting approximately 59,000 people worldwide. The central nervous system (CNS) is targeted, and rabies has a case fatality rate of almost 100% in humans and animals. Rabies is entirely preventable through proper vaccination, and thus, the highest incidence is typically observed in developing countries, mainly in Africa and Asia. However, there are still cases in European countries and the United States. Recently, demographic, increasing income levels, and the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID‐19) pandemic have caused a massive raising in the animal population, enhancing the need for preventive measures (e.g., vaccination, surveillance, and animal control programs), postexposure prophylaxis, and a better understanding of rabies pathophysiology to identify therapeutic targets, since there is no effective treatment after the onset of clinical manifestations. Here, we review the neuroimmune biology and mechanisms of rabies. Its pathogenesis involves a complex and poorly understood modulation of immune and brain functions associated with metabolic, synaptic, and neuronal impairments, resulting in fatal outcomes without significant histopathological lesions in the CNS. In this context, the neuroimmunological and neurochemical aspects of excitatory/inhibitory signaling (e.g., GABA/glutamate crosstalk) are likely related to the clinical manifestations of rabies infection. Uncovering new links between immunopathological mechanisms and neurochemical imbalance will be essential to identify novel potential therapeutic targets to reduce rabies morbidity and mortality.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Virology

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