Viruses (Sep 2019)

Understanding Enterovirus D68-Induced Neurologic Disease: A Basic Science Review

  • Alison M. Hixon,
  • Joshua Frost,
  • Michael J. Rudy,
  • Kevin Messacar,
  • Penny Clarke,
  • Kenneth L. Tyler

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/v11090821
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 9
p. 821

Abstract

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In 2014, the United States (US) experienced an unprecedented epidemic of enterovirus D68 (EV-D68)-induced respiratory disease that was temporally associated with the emergence of acute flaccid myelitis (AFM), a paralytic disease occurring predominantly in children, that has a striking resemblance to poliomyelitis. Although a definitive causal link between EV-D68 infection and AFM has not been unequivocally established, rapidly accumulating clinical, immunological, and epidemiological evidence points to EV-D68 as the major causative agent of recent seasonal childhood AFM outbreaks in the US. This review summarizes evidence, gained from in vivo and in vitro models of EV-D68-induced disease, which demonstrates that contemporary EV-D68 strains isolated during and since the 2014 outbreak differ from historical EV-D68 in several factors influencing neurovirulence, including their genomic sequence, their receptor utilization, their ability to infect neurons, and their neuropathogenicity in mice. These findings provide biological plausibility that EV-D68 is a causal agent of AFM and provide important experimental models for studies of pathogenesis and treatment that are likely to be difficult or impossible in humans.

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