Imbalanced immune response and dysregulation of neural functions underline fatal opportunistic encephalitis caused by astrovirus

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Abstract

The incidence of infections of the central nervous system (CNS) in humans is increasing due to emergence and reemergence of pathogens and an increase in the number of immunocompromised patients. Many viruses are opportunists and can invade the CNS if the immune response of the host is impaired. Here we investigate neuropathogenesis of a rare CNS infection in immunocompromised patients caused by astrovirus and show that it shares many features with another opportunistic infection of the CNS caused by human immunodeficiency virus. We show that astrovirus infects CNS neurons with a major impact on the brainstem. In the setting of impaired peripheral adaptive immunity, host responses in the astrovirus infected brain are skewed to the innate immune response with exuberant activation of microglia and macrophages. Astrovirus infection of neurons and responses by phagocytic cells lead to disrupted synaptic integrity, loss of afferent innervation related to infected neurons, and global impairment of both excitatory and inhibitory neurotransmission. The response employed in the CNS against opportunistic viruses, such as astrovirus and HIV, may be a common compensatory defense mechanism which inadvertently leads to loss of neural functions due to the host’s exuberant innate immune response to pathogens when adaptive immunity is impaired.

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