Anatomical barriers shield the brain from SARS-CoV-2 invasion at vulnerable interfaces

Anatomical barriers shield the brain from SARS-CoV-2 invasion at vulnerable interfaces
Omicron BA.2 swept across a broad swath of the respiratory epithelium of a COVID-19 patient who died 4.5 days after diagnosis of the infection. The red color represents staining with an antibody against the nucleocapsid protein of the virus. The green and blue dots represent staining with RNAscope probes for specific types of viral RNA molecules that are only present during ongoing viral replication, respectively negative-sense nucleocapsid and negative-sense orf1ab RNA. Nearly every cell in the epithelium was serving as a “factory” for replicating viral RNA at the time this postmortem tissue sample was taken. Credit: M. Khan

A common symptom of COVID-19 is a partial or complete loss of smell. The virus infects sustentacular cells in the olfactory epithelium and is thought to impair thereby the activity of the sensory neurons in this epithelium.

Scientists at the Max Planck Research Unit for Neurogenetics in Frankfurt in collaboration with physicians and scientists at the University Hospitals Leuven (Leuven, Belgium) and hospitals in Bruges and Brussels, Belgium, have now examined tissue samples of nasal mucosa andof patients who died from or with a SARS-CoV-2 infection, including the delta, omicron BA.1 or BA.2 variants.

In a total of more than a hundred COVID-19 patients, the scientists failed to find evidence for viral invasion of the brain. A poorly characterized type of fibroblasts in the olfactory mucosa appears to act as one of several anatomical barriers that shield the brain from the virus at vulnerable interfaces.

Anosmia occurs often after infection with SARS-CoV-2, ranging from a temporary impairment to a persistent, possibly permanent, loss of smell. The nasal mucosa represents one of the main entry sites of the virus. Early in the pandemic, the suspicion arose that the virus might infect cells of the olfactory epithelium, hitchhike on the olfactory nerve, and then infect or invade the brain via the nearby olfactory bulb, which is located only a few millimeters from the nasal cavity.

But this suspicion has not been confirmed. In November 2021, scientists at the Max Planck Research Unit for Neurogenetics in Frankfurt, together with physicians and scientists in Leuven and Bruges, Belgium, reported that SARS-CoV-2 infects the sustentacular cells (supporting cells) of the, but not the sensory neurons. The researchers were unable to detect the virus in the.

The physicians had developed a bedsideto collect tissue samples from deceased patients. With this new procedure, they were able to harvest, within an hour or two after the time of death, tissue samples of respiratory mucosa,, and the frontal lobe of the brain, as well as whole olfactory bulbs, in a cohort of 70 COVID-19 patients. This unusually short postmortem interval makes the tissue samples highly suitable for molecular and histological studies.

Anatomical barriers shield the brain from SARS-CoV-2 invasion at vulnerable interfaces
SARS-CoV-2 infects the respiratory epithelium, but not the brain. Credit: P. Meeze and M. Khan

All brain samples were negative

Now the team has examined tissue samples obtained from a second cohort of 45 COVID-19 patients who had died within two weeks after diagnosis and were infected with the delta, omicron BA.1 or BA.2 variants. They also analyzedof the frontal lobe of the brain of most COVID-19 patients from the first cohort, who were infected with non-variants of concern or the alpha variant.

"We examined microscopically the olfactory bulbs and the frontal lobe samples for viral nucleic acid and protein. All samples were negative: no neurons were infected. Moreover, by trying to culture SARS-CoV-2 from cerebrospinal fluid samples, we could not find evidence that SARS-CoV-2 had invaded the brain," says Peter Mombaerts of the Max Planck Research Unit for Neurogenetics.

增加了劳拉·范Gerven ENT外科医生在想ty Hospitals Leuven, Belgium, "SARS-CoV-2 would have the greatest chance of displaying its hypothetical neurotropic or neuroinvasive capacity in these highly vulnerable patients, with a colossal failure of the host defense and the gravest outcome of all."

The so-called perineurial fibroblasts of the olfactory nerve—thin, elongated cells whose function is not known—apparently act as a protective anatomical barrier. They wrap around the olfactory nerve bundles in one or more densely packed layers.

"We do not know how these cells prevent the virus from invading the olfactory nerve bundles. But they seem instrumental in preventing SARS-CoV-2—and possibly some of the many other pathogens that infect the—from invading the brain," Mombaerts explains.

The paper is published in the journalNeuron. The new results do not support the suspicion that SARS-CoV-2 infects brain cells and invades the brain. The findings have implications for the mechanisms of long COVID.

更多的信息:Mona Khan et al, Anatomical barriers against SARS-CoV-2 neuroinvasion at vulnerable interfaces visualized in deceased COVID-19 patients,Neuron(2022).DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2022.11.007

Journal information: Neuron

Citation: Anatomical barriers shield the brain from SARS-CoV-2 invasion at vulnerable interfaces (2022, December 8) retrieved 17 January 2023 from //www.pyrotek-europe.com/news/2022-12-anatomical-barriers-shield-brain-sars-cov-.html
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