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Mild respiratory COVID can cause multi-lineage neural cell and myelin dysregulation

Authors :
Anthony Fernández-Castañeda
Peiwen Lu
Anna C. Geraghty
Eric Song
Myoung-Hwa Lee
Jamie Wood
Michael R. O’Dea
Selena Dutton
Kiarash Shamardani
Kamsi Nwangwu
Rebecca Mancusi
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Kathryn R. Taylor
Lehi Acosta-Alvarez
Karen Malacon
Michael B. Keough
Lijun Ni
Pamelyn J. Woo
Daniel Contreras-Esquivel
Angus Martin Shaw Toland
Jeff R. Gehlhausen
Jon Klein
Takehiro Takahashi
Julio Silva
Benjamin Israelow
Carolina Lucas
Tianyang Mao
Mario A. Peña-Hernández
Alexandra Tabachnikova
Robert J. Homer
Laura Tabacof
Jenna Tosto-Mancuso
Erica Breyman
Amy Kontorovich
Dayna McCarthy
Martha Quezado
Hannes Vogel
Marco M. Hefti
Daniel P. Perl
Shane Liddelow
Rebecca Folkerth
David Putrino
Avindra Nath
Akiko Iwasaki
Michelle Monje
Source :
Cell. 185:2452-2468.e16
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2022.

Abstract

COVID survivors frequently experience lingering neurological symptoms that resemble cancer-therapy-related cognitive impairment, a syndrome for which white matter microglial reactivity and consequent neural dysregulation is central. Here, we explored the neurobiological effects of respiratory SARS-CoV-2 infection and found white-matter-selective microglial reactivity in mice and humans. Following mild respiratory COVID in mice, persistently impaired hippocampal neurogenesis, decreased oligodendrocytes, and myelin loss were evident together with elevated CSF cytokines/chemokines including CCL11. Systemic CCL11 administration specifically caused hippocampal microglial reactivity and impaired neurogenesis. Concordantly, humans with lasting cognitive symptoms post-COVID exhibit elevated CCL11 levels. Compared with SARS-CoV-2, mild respiratory influenza in mice caused similar patterns of white-matter-selective microglial reactivity, oligodendrocyte loss, impaired neurogenesis, and elevated CCL11 at early time points, but after influenza, only elevated CCL11 and hippocampal pathology persisted. These findings illustrate similar neuropathophysiology after cancer therapy and respiratory SARS-CoV-2 infection which may contribute to cognitive impairment following even mild COVID.

Details

ISSN :
00928674
Volume :
185
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cell
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ec1354a1c99466999fc5d4a3f7d6eef4
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2022.06.008