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. 1999 Dec;58(12):1197–1206. doi: 10.1097/00005072-199912000-00001

Nidovirus Infections: Experimental Model Systems of Human Neurologic Diseases

Ehud Lavi 1,, Talya Schwartz 1, Yi-Ping Jin 1, Li Fu 1
PMCID: PMC7107479  PMID: 10604745

Abstract

The presence of terminally differentiated slow- and non-dividing cells in the central nervous system (CNS) provides a safe harbor for viral persistence and latency and constitutes a unique immunologic environment for viral infections. Studies of experimental model systems of viral infections of the CNS provide insight into mechanisms of viral persistence and immune-mediated pathology. Nidoviruses are comprised of 2 families of viruses, coronaviruses and arteriviruses, and are common pathogens of humans and a variety of animal species. Both families of viruses contain neurotropic strains that produce experimental neurologic diseases in rodents. These include acute meningitis and encephalitis; acute poliomyelitis; and chronic inflammatory, immune-mediated, demyelination. Coronavirus-induced demyelinating disease mimics many of the pathologic features of Multiple Sclerosis (MS).

Keywords: Arterivirus, Coronavirus, Demyelination, Encephalitis, Meningitis, Nidovirales, Torovirus


Articles from Journal of Neuropathology and Experimental Neurology are provided here courtesy of Oxford University Press

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