| Literature DB >> 31357540 |
Luis Filgueira1, Nils Lannes2.
Abstract
Japanese encephalitis virus (JEV) is an emerging flavivirus of the Asia-Pacific region. More than two billion people live in endemic or epidemic areas and are at risk of infection. Recently, the first autochthonous human case was recorded in Africa, and infected birds have been found in Europe. JEV may spread even further to other continents. The first section of this review covers established and new information about the epidemiology of JEV. The subsequent sections focus on the impact of JEV on humans, including the natural course and immunity. Furthermore, new concepts are discussed about JEV's entry into the brain. Finally, interactions of JEV and host cells are covered, as well as how JEV may spread in the body through latently infected immune cells and cell-to-cell transmission of virions or via other infectious material, including JEV genomic RNA.Entities:
Keywords: JEV; Japanese encephalitis virus; blood–brain barrier; cellular events; epidemiology; flavivirus; immune response; symptoms; transmission; vaccine
Year: 2019 PMID: 31357540 PMCID: PMC6789543 DOI: 10.3390/pathogens8030111
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pathogens ISSN: 2076-0817
Countries and Geographic Regions with documented JEV cases.
| Geographic Region | Countries/Territories/Provinces |
|---|---|
|
| China (including Tibet) |
| Japan | |
| North Korea | |
| Russia (Far East Provinces) | |
| South Korea | |
| Taiwan | |
|
| Bangladesh |
| India | |
| Nepal | |
| Pakistan | |
| Sri Lanka | |
|
| Brunei |
| Cambodia | |
| Indonesia | |
| Laos | |
| Malaysia | |
| Myanmar | |
| Papua New Guinea | |
| Philippines | |
| Singapore | |
| Thailand | |
| Timor-Leste | |
| Vietnam | |
|
| Cape York Peninsula of Queensland |
| Top End of Northern Territory |
Figure 1Geographic regions and countries with documented human JEV cases, modified from https://www.cdc.gov/japaneseencephalitis/Maps/index.html.
Figure 2Infection chain and cycles of JEV. Wading and water birds are natural hosts and carriers of JEV. Culex and Aedes mosquitos transfer JEV between birds and to other species. Through seasonal migration, the birds spread JEV between tropical, subtropical, and temperate regions and across the sea. Wild and domesticated pigs play a special role in the infection chain, as they are carriers and amplifiers of JEV through vector-free transmission of JEV between them. Humans are dead-end hosts with about 1% succumbing to encephalitis, usually with subsequent severe deficiencies or fatal outcome.
Figure 3JEV enters the brain through two different ways and leads to infection of neurons and encephalitis. On the left, it is proposed that JEV or JEV-infected leucocytes (monocytes, dendritic cells, T cells) circulating in the blood infect endothelial cells of the brain capillaries. The endothelial cells, without being harmed by JEV, amplify and transmit JEV to pericytes, or even microglia cells or astrocytes that are in contact with the capillaries. Infected pericytes, microglia, and astrocytes amplify JEV and transmit it to other brain cells, including neurons, astrocytes, and microglia. On the right, JEV-infected T cells or monocytes circulating in the blood migrate through the choroid plexus into the ventricular space with its cerebrospinal fluid, and from there into the periventricular nervous tissue. There, microglia, astrocytes, and neurons are infected either by cell-to-cell contact, or by newly produced extracellular JEV virions. In the middle, JEV-infected neurons undergo eventually apoptosis. In addition, JEV-infected microglia and astrocytes produce inflammatory factors (TNFα, IL-1) that induce collateral damage resulting in apoptosis of non-infected neurons.