Abstract

Lyssaviruses cause the disease rabies, which is a fatal encephalitic disease resulting in approximately 59,000 human deaths annually. The prototype species, rabies lyssavirus, is the most prevalent of all lyssaviruses and poses the greatest public health threat. In Africa, six confirmed and one putative species of lyssavirus have been identified. Rabies lyssavirus remains endemic throughout mainland Africa, where the domestic dog is the primary reservoir – resulting in the highest per capita death rate from rabies globally. Rabies is typically transmitted through the injection of virus-laden saliva through a bite or scratch from an infected animal. Due to the inhibition of specific immune responses by multifunctional viral proteins, the virus usually replicates at low levels in the muscle tissue and subsequently enters the peripheral nervous system at the neuromuscular junction. Pathogenic rabies lyssavirus strains inhibit innate immune signaling and induce cellular apoptosis as the virus progresses to the central nervous system and brain using viral protein facilitated retrograde axonal transport. Rabies manifests in two different forms - the encephalitic and the paralytic form - with differing clinical manifestations and survival times. Disease symptoms are thought to be due mitochondrial dysfunction, rather than neuronal apoptosis. While much is known about rabies, there remain many gaps in knowledge about the neuropathology of the disease. It should be emphasized however, that rabies is vaccine preventable and dog-mediated human rabies has been eliminated in various countries. The global elimination of dog-mediated human rabies in the foreseeable future is therefore an entirely feasible goal.

Highlights

  • Lyssaviruses are responsible for rabies, which is arguably the deadliest encephalitic disease known

  • While rabies lyssavirus (RABV) is only associated with non-volant terrestrial mammals in Africa, Duvenhage virus (DUVV) and LBV are both associated with bat reservoirs, while Ikoma lyssavirus (IKOV) and Mokola lyssavirus (MOKV) have yet unidentified reservoirs [14, 15]

  • This neuronal spread is facilitated by the p75NTR receptor, which is non-essential for infection, but facilitates directed and more rapid transport of RABV to the central nervous system (CNS) [22]

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Summary

Lyssaviruses and the Fatal Encephalitic Disease Rabies

Reviewed by: Guanghui Wu, Animal and Plant Health Agency (United Kingdom), United Kingdom Si’Ana Coggins, Henry M Jackson Foundation for the Advancement of Military Medicine (HJF), United States. Lyssaviruses and the Fatal Encephalitic Disease Rabies. Lyssaviruses cause the disease rabies, which is a fatal encephalitic disease resulting in approximately 59,000 human deaths annually. Rabies lyssavirus remains endemic throughout mainland Africa, where the domestic dog is the primary reservoir – resulting in the highest per capita death rate from rabies globally. Pathogenic rabies lyssavirus strains inhibit innate immune signaling and induce cellular apoptosis as the virus progresses to the central nervous system and brain using viral protein facilitated retrograde axonal transport. While much is known about rabies, there remain many gaps in knowledge about the neuropathology of the disease. It should be emphasized that rabies is vaccine preventable and dog-mediated human rabies has been eliminated in various countries.

INTRODUCTION
THE GLOBAL BURDEN OF DOG RABIES
IMMUNE RESPONSE AND IMMUNE EVASION
Findings
DISCUSSION
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