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Human Coronaviruses and Other Respiratory Viruses: Underestimated Opportunistic Pathogens of the Central Nervous System?

Authors
  • Desforges, Marc1
  • Le Coupanec, Alain1
  • Dubeau, Philippe1
  • Bourgouin, Andréanne1
  • Lajoie, Louise
  • Dubé, Mathieu1, 2
  • Talbot, Pierre J.1
  • 1 (A.B.);
  • 2 Research Centre of the Centre Hospitalier de l’Université de Montréal (CRCHUM), Montreal, QC H3T 1J4, Canada
Type
Published Article
Journal
Viruses
Publisher
MDPI AG
Publication Date
Dec 20, 2019
Volume
12
Issue
1
Identifiers
DOI: 10.3390/v12010014
PMID: 31861926
PMCID: PMC7020001
Source
PubMed Central
Keywords
Disciplines
  • Review
License
Green

Abstract

Respiratory viruses infect the human upper respiratory tract, mostly causing mild diseases. However, in vulnerable populations, such as newborns, infants, the elderly and immune-compromised individuals, these opportunistic pathogens can also affect the lower respiratory tract, causing a more severe disease (e.g., pneumonia). Respiratory viruses can also exacerbate asthma and lead to various types of respiratory distress syndromes. Furthermore, as they can adapt fast and cross the species barrier, some of these pathogens, like influenza A and SARS-CoV, have occasionally caused epidemics or pandemics, and were associated with more serious clinical diseases and even mortality. For a few decades now, data reported in the scientific literature has also demonstrated that several respiratory viruses have neuroinvasive capacities, since they can spread from the respiratory tract to the central nervous system (CNS). Viruses infecting human CNS cells could then cause different types of encephalopathy, including encephalitis, and long-term neurological diseases. Like other well-recognized neuroinvasive human viruses, respiratory viruses may damage the CNS as a result of misdirected host immune responses that could be associated with autoimmunity in susceptible individuals (virus-induced neuro-immunopathology) and/or viral replication, which directly causes damage to CNS cells (virus-induced neuropathology). The etiological agent of several neurological disorders remains unidentified. Opportunistic human respiratory pathogens could be associated with the triggering or the exacerbation of these disorders whose etiology remains poorly understood. Herein, we present a global portrait of some of the most prevalent or emerging human respiratory viruses that have been associated with possible pathogenic processes in CNS infection, with a special emphasis on human coronaviruses.

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